Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Jeffrey A. Cigrang is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Jeffrey A. Cigrang.


Circulation | 2002

Management of Vasovagal Syncope: Controlling or Aborting Faints by Leg Crossing and Muscle Tensing

Alan L. Peterson; Jeffrey A. Cigrang

To the Editor: We read with great interest the article by Krediet et al1 demonstrating that a leg crossing maneuver can prevent or delay vasovagal reactions. We are writing because many clinicians and researchers may be unaware that a similar behavioral treatment has been shown to be very effective for syncope. Applied tension is a behavioral treatment approach that has been demonstrated in several controlled trials to be an effective and inexpensive treatment for syncope related to injection and blood phobia.2–4 This treatment entails the use of applied muscular tension to temporarily increase blood pressure to prevent syncope during graduated exposure to increasingly greater anxiety-provoking stimuli. The combination of applied tension and repeated, graduated exposure results in the eventual extinction of the vasovagal syncope reaction, often after only 1 extended treatment session. A randomized trial of applied tension for injection phobia …


Journal of Occupational Health Psychology | 2000

Stress management training for military trainees returned to duty after a mental health evaluation: effect on graduation rates.

Jeffrey A. Cigrang; Sandy L. Todd; Eric G. Carbone

A significant proportion of people entering the military are discharged within the first 6 months of enlistment. Mental health related problems are often cited as the cause of discharge. This study evaluated the utility of stress inoculation training in helping reduce the attrition of a sample of Air Force trainees at risk for discharge from basic military training. Participants were 178 trainees referred for a psychological evaluation from basic training. Participants were randomly assigned to a 2-session stress management group or a usual-care control condition. Compared with past studies that used less rigorous methodology, this study did not find that exposure to stress management information increased the probability of graduating basic military training. Results are discussed in terms of possible reasons for the lack of treatment effects and directions for future research.


Journal of Clinical Psychology in Medical Settings | 2003

Spontaneous Reports of Religious Coping by Patients with Chronic Physical Illness

Jeffrey A. Cigrang; Ann S. Hryshko-Mullen; Alan L. Peterson

Individuals undergoing the stress of physical illness often report the use of religious coping activities. This study compared the frequency of spontaneous reports of religious coping in three groups of patients including those with cancer preparing for a bone marrow transplant (n = 22), chronic pain (n = 36), and cardiovascular disease (n = 53). Participants were asked to respond to a written, open-ended question asking how they were coping with the challenges involved in their medical condition. The question asked them to list the resources, strategies, strengths, or behaviors that they found most helpful. No mention of religion or religious coping was included with the question. Of the 111 participants surveyed, 26.1% included religious coping in their responses. The relative percentage of religious coping was calculated by dividing the total number of coping responses by number of religious responses. Mean percentage of religious coping was highest in participants preparing for a bone marrow transplant (22.9%), followed by the cardiac group (5.7%), and the chronic pain group (3.8%).


Journal of Family Psychology | 2013

Combat Disclosure in Intimate Relationships: Mediating the Impact of Partner Support on Posttraumatic Stress

Christina Balderrama-Durbin; Douglas K. Snyder; Jeffrey A. Cigrang; G. Wayne Talcott; JoLyn Tatum; Monty T. Baker; Daniel Cassidy; Scott Sonnek; Richard E. Heyman; Amy M. Smith Slep

Although previous research has shown a negative relation between partner support and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptom severity among military service members following deployment, the mediating mechanisms of this effect remain poorly understood. This study examined willingness to disclose deployment- and combat-related experiences as a mediating mechanism underlying the linkage between intimate partner support and PTSD symptom severity in a sample of 76 U.S. Air Force service members deployed to Iraq in a year-long, high-risk mission. Airmens reports of overall social support, and partner support specifically, significantly predicted concurrent postdeployment PTSD symptom severity. Subsequent mediation analyses demonstrated that level of disclosure of deployment- and combat-related experiences by service members to their intimate partners accounted for a significant portion of the relation between partner support and postdeployment PTSD symptom severity. The level of Airmens disclosure was also inversely related to levels of relationship distress. Implications of these findings for prevention and intervention strategies and for further research are discussed.


Behavior Modification | 2006

Behavioral treatment of chronic belching due to aerophagia in a normal adult

Jeffrey A. Cigrang; Christine M. Hunter; Alan L. Peterson

Aerophagia, or excessive air swallowing, is a potential cause of belching, flatulence, bloating, and abdominal pain and may contribute to a worsening of gastrointestinal (GI) disorders. A limited number of published reports of aerophagia treatment indicate that behavioral methods may be of benefit. A case report is presented describing the behavioral treatment of chronic belching due to aerophagia in an adult female. The collaborative application of single-participant design research helped identify open-mouth, diaphragmatic breathing and minimized swallowing as an effective intervention. Belching frequency was reduced from an average rate of 18 per 5-min interval during the baseline period to 3 per 5-min period after treatment. Results were maintained at an 18-month follow-up. Recommendations for the use of a brief treatment protocol with adults referred for chronic belching or other GI complaints attributed to aerophagia are discussed.


Journal of Anxiety Disorders | 2015

Treatment of active duty military with PTSD in primary care: A follow-up report.

Jeffrey A. Cigrang; Sheila A. M. Rauch; Jim Mintz; Antoinette Brundige; Laura L. Avila; Craig J. Bryan; Jeffrey L. Goodie; Alan L. Peterson

First-line trauma-focused therapies offered in specialty mental health clinics do not reach many veterans and active duty service members with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Primary care is an ideal environment to expand access to mental health care. Several promising clinical case series reports of brief PTSD therapies adapted for primary care have shown positive results, but the long-term effectiveness with military members is unknown. The purpose of this study was to determine the long-term outcome of an open trial of a brief cognitive-behavioral primary care-delivered protocol developed specifically for deployment-related PTSD in a sample of 24 active duty military (15 men, 9 women). Measures of PTSD symptom severity showed statistically and clinically significant reductions from baseline to posttreatment that were maintained at the 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessments. Similar reductions were maintained in depressive symptoms and ratings of global mental health functioning.


Journal of Personality Assessment | 1999

Predicting Outcome of Military Basic Training for Individuals Referred for Psychological Evaluation

Eric G. Carbone; Jeffrey A. Cigrang; Sandra L. Todd; Edna R. Fiedler

We examined outcome data for 632 U.S. Air Force personnel who were referred for psychological evaluation during Basic Military Training (BMT) but who were subsequently returned to BMT to determine what proportion graduated. We analyzed motivational, biographical, and psychological testing variables, using logistic regression to develop a model predictive of training outcome. The results demonstrated that a relatively small number of variables could predict outcome with close to 70% accuracy. Level of optimism regarding training, history of physical abuse, and frequency of visits to the trainee health clinic were major contributors to the model. MMPI-2 (Hathaway & McKinley, 1989) Scales D and Sc also remained in the model but added little to its power. The findings are generally consistent with prior research on normal military populations, except that some factors previously linked to adjustment, such as sex and ethnicity, were found to be unrelated to training outcome in this population.


Nicotine & Tobacco Research | 2002

Pilot Evaluation of a Population-Based Health Intervention for Reducing Use of Smokeless Tobacco

Jeffrey A. Cigrang; Herbert H. Severson; Alan L. Peterson

Smokeless tobacco (ST) use has been associated with numerous negative health consequences, yet the prevalence of ST has increased dramatically since the 1970s. Young males in the military are at an elevated risk for ST use relative to the general population. Sixty active-duty male participants were identified as ST users during their annual preventive health screening and randomly assigned to minimal-contact intervention or usual care. Intervention participants were proactively contacted by phone and recruited, using a motivational interviewing style, for a cessation program consisting of a treatment manual, video, and two supportive phone calls from a cessation counselor. Sixty-five per cent (20/31) agreed to participate in the minimal-contact intervention. Three- and 6-month follow-up contacts found that the cessation rates reported by intervention participants were double those reported by participants receiving usual care (41% vs. 17% at 3 months, 37% vs. 19% at 6 months). These pilot study data suggest that proactive recruitment using a motivational interviewing approach to offer a treatment provides a good opportunity to reduce the use of ST in military settings.


Nicotine & Tobacco Research | 2013

Tobacco use during military deployment

G. Wayne Talcott; Jeffrey A. Cigrang; Deborah Sherrill-Mittleman; Douglas K. Snyder; Monty T. Baker; JoLyn Tatum; Daniel Cassidy; Scott Sonnek; Christina Balderrama-Durbin; Robert C. Klesges; Jon O. Ebbert; Amy M. Smith Slep; Richard E. Heyman

INTRODUCTION Tobacco use among military personnel is associated with significant health care expenditures, lost productivity, and compromised combat readiness. The prevalence remains high among military personnel and may increase in high-risk situations such as deployment. We assessed the prevalence of tobacco use across the deployment cycle, changes in tobacco use (nonuse, continued use, initiation/harm escalation, cessation/harm reduction) during deployment, and the impact of deployment history on tobacco use. METHOD Cigarette smoking, smokeless tobacco (ST) use, and dual tobacco use were evaluated among 278U.S. Air Force Security Forces personnel undertaking a 1-year deployment to a high-threat combat environment. Multinomial regression was used to examine prediction of tobacco use patterns both cross-sectionally and longitudinally. RESULTS More than half (53%-63%) of all Security Forces used tobacco at all stages of the deployment cycle. Individual tobacco use trajectories showed significant differences in prevalence rates of initiation/harm escalation and cessation/harm reduction when comparing the transition from predeployment to the deployed environment versus returning to postdeployment status. Airmen who had deployed more than once previously had a higher likelihood of using ST use at predeployment and engaging in dual tobacco use during deployment. CONCLUSIONS Findings suggest the potential benefit of targeted or universal interventions at each stage of the deployment cycle to reduce the onset, maintenance, or escalation of tobacco use behaviors in the U.S. military.


Psychological Assessment | 2014

Assessing Posttraumatic Stress in Military Service Members: Improving Efficiency and Accuracy

Caitlin L. Fissette; Douglas K. Snyder; Christina Balderrama-Durbin; Steve Balsis; Jeffrey A. Cigrang; G. Wayne Talcott; JoLyn Tatum; Monty T. Baker; Daniel Cassidy; Scott Sonnek; Richard E. Heyman; Amy M. Smith Slep

Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is assessed across many different populations and assessment contexts. However, measures of PTSD symptomatology often are not tailored to meet the needs and demands of these different populations and settings. In order to develop population- and context-specific measures of PTSD it is useful first to examine the item-level functioning of existing assessment methods. One such assessment measure is the 17-item PTSD Checklist-Military version (PCL-M; Weathers, Litz, Herman, Huska, & Keane, 1993). Although the PCL-M is widely used in both military and veteran health-care settings, it is limited by interpretations based on aggregate scores that ignore variability in item endorsement rates and relatedness to PTSD. Based on item response theory, this study conducted 2-parameter logistic analyses of the PCL-M in a sample of 196 service members returning from a yearlong, high-risk deployment to Iraq. Results confirmed substantial variability across items both in terms of their relatedness to PTSD and their likelihood of endorsement at any given level of PTSD. The test information curve for the full 17-item PCL-M peaked sharply at a value of θ = 0.71, reflecting greatest information at approximately the 76th percentile level of underlying PTSD symptom levels in this sample. Implications of findings are discussed as they relate to identifying more efficient, accurate subsets of items tailored to military service members as well as other specific populations and evaluation contexts.

Collaboration


Dive into the Jeffrey A. Cigrang's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alan L. Peterson

Wilford Hall Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

JoLyn Tatum

Wright-Patterson Air Force Base

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

G. Wayne Talcott

University of Tennessee Health Science Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Monty T. Baker

San Antonio Military Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Eric G. Carbone

Wilford Hall Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge