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Dive into the research topics where Patricia J. Moran is active.

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Featured researches published by Patricia J. Moran.


Health Psychology | 2002

Patient personality and mortality: a 4-year prospective examination of chronic renal insufficiency.

Alan J. Christensen; Shawna L. Ehlers; John S. Wiebe; Patricia J. Moran; Katherine Raichle; Karin Ferneyhough; William J. Lawton

The present study examined the role of personality as a predictor of mortality among patients with chronic renal insufficiency. A prospective evaluation of the influence of personality on patient survival was conducted over an average 49-month period. Cox regression was used to evaluate the effects of 5 dimensions of personality in a sample of 174 patients (100 male and 74 female). At follow-up, 49 patients had died. Significant demographic and clinical predictors of survival included age, diabetic status, and hemoglobin level. After these predictors were controlled for, 2 personality traits, conscientiousness and neuroticism, predicted patient mortality. Patients with high neuroticism scores had a 37.5% higher estimated mortality rate. Patients with low conscientiousness scores had a 36.4% increased mortality rate.


Journal of Behavioral Medicine | 2005

The Validity of Beck Depression Inventory and Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression Items in the Assessment of Depression Among Patients with Multiple Sclerosis

Patricia J. Moran; David C. Mohr

Measuring depression in patients with chronic illnesses such as multiple sclerosis (MS) is potentially complicated by the fact that several somatic symptoms of depression are also common in chronic illnesses. Whether standard assessment measures such as the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) and Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression (HRSD) should exclude certain somatic symptoms when used in MS has been examined previously, but there is no clear consensus on this issue. The present study evaluated the utility of individual BDI and HRSD items for assessing depression in MS patients by examining how individual items responded to depression treatment in 42 (29 female) depressed MS patients. All 21 BDI items and 12 of 17 HRSD items decreased significantly with treatment, suggesting that all BDI items tap depression, as do 12 of 17 HRSD items. Thus, the present data support the inclusion of all BDI items when measuring depression in MS. Decisions on whether or not to use all HRSD items or only the 12 shown here to capture depression may depend on the study purpose and design.


Health Psychology | 1999

Assessment of irrational health beliefs: Relation to health practices and medical regimen adherence

Alan J. Christensen; Patricia J. Moran; John S. Wiebe

The purpose of the present research was to provide initial validation of the 20-item Irrational Health Belief Scale (IHBS). Study 1 included 392 undergraduate psychology students. Results from Study 1 suggested that the IHBS total score is internally consistent and stable over an 18-month time period. Greater health-related cognitive distortion (higher IHBS scores) was associated with weaker internal health locus of control beliefs, lower positive affectivity, stronger chance health locus of control beliefs, and greater negative affectivity. Most important, greater cognitive distortion was uniquely and significantly associated with a less positive pattern of health practices. Study 2 involved 107 individuals with Type I diabetes mellitus. Results indicated that higher IHBS scores were significantly associated with both objective (hemoglobin HbA1) and self-reported diabetic regimen adherence independent of trait neuroticism and conscientiousness.


Health Psychology | 2002

Effect of a behavioral self-regulation intervention on patient adherence in hemodialysis

Alan J. Christensen; Patricia J. Moran; John S. Wiebe; Shawna L. Ehlers; William J. Lawton

The present study examined the efficacy of a behavioral intervention designed to increase adherence to fluid-intake restrictions among hemodialysis patients. Twenty intervention-group patients were compared with 20 matched control patients on an indicator of fluid-intake adherence at 3 time points. The Group x Time interaction was significant, indicating that patients in the 2 groups exhibited a differential pattern of change in fluid-intake adherence across the follow-up period. The intervention and control groups did not differ significantly in terms of adherence at the initial postintervention period but did differ at the 8-week follow-up. The observed group differences were, in part, due to a trend toward increasingly better adherence in the intervention group and poorer adherence in the control group across the follow-up period.


PLOS ONE | 2014

A Randomized Pilot Trial of a Moderate Carbohydrate Diet Compared to a Very Low Carbohydrate Diet in Overweight or Obese Individuals with Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus or Prediabetes

Laura R. Saslow; Sarah Kim; Jennifer Daubenmier; Judith Tedlie Moskowitz; Stephen D. Phinney; Veronica Goldman; Elizabeth Murphy; Rachel M. Cox; Patricia J. Moran; Fredrick M. Hecht

We compared the effects of two diets on glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) and other health-related outcomes in overweight or obese adults with type 2 diabetes or prediabetes (HbA1c>6%). We randomized participants to either a medium carbohydrate, low fat, calorie-restricted, carbohydrate counting diet (MCCR) consistent with guidelines from the American Diabetes Association (n = 18) or a very low carbohydrate, high fat, non calorie-restricted diet whose goal was to induce nutritional ketosis (LCK, n = 16). We excluded participants receiving insulin; 74% were taking oral diabetes medications. Groups met for 13 sessions over 3 months and were taught diet information and psychological skills to promote behavior change and maintenance. At 3 months, mean HbA1c level was unchanged from baseline in the MCCR diet group, while it decreased 0.6% in the LCK group; there was a significant between group difference in HbA1c change favoring the LCK group (−0.6%, 95% CI, −1.1% to −0.03%, p = 0.04). Forty-four percent of the LCK group discontinued one or more diabetes medications, compared to 11% of the MCCR group (p = 0.03); 31% discontinued sulfonylureas in the LCK group, compared to 5% in the MCCR group (p = 0.05). The LCK group lost 5.5 kg vs. 2.6 kg lost in MCCR group (p = 0.09). Our results suggest that a very low carbohydrate diet coupled with skills to promote behavior change may improve glycemic control in type 2 diabetes while allowing decreases in diabetes medications. This clinical trial was registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT01713764.


Head and Neck-journal for The Sciences and Specialties of The Head and Neck | 1998

Health states following head and neck cancer treatment: Patient, health-care professional, and public perspectives

Vishram Jalukar; Gerry F. Funk; Alan J. Christensen; Lucy Hynds Karnell; Patricia J. Moran

This study investigated the assignment of preference values to health states which may follow head and neck cancer (HNC) treatment. Preference values for these health states were provided by HNC patients, HNC health‐care providers, and a group of college students representing individuals with little knowledge of HNC.


Psycho-oncology | 2009

Depression, distress and positive mood in late‐stage cancer: a longitudinal study

Judith G. Rabkin; Martin McElhiney; Patricia J. Moran; Michael Acree; Susan Folkman

Objectives: To determine whether new‐onset clinical depression emerges over time, and whether positive and negative mood levels change among patients with terminal cancer.


Annals of Behavioral Medicine | 1997

Social support and conscientiousness in hemodialysis adherence

Patricia J. Moran; Alan J. Christensen; William J. Lawton

Previous conclusions regarding the role of social support in hemodialysis adherence are inconsistent, suggesting that other factors may moderate this relationship. Using the Five-Factor Model of Personality, we examined the hypothesis that conscientiousness would interact with social support in predicting fluid-intake and medication adherence in a sample of 56 chronic hemodialysis patients. Hierarchical regression analyses (controlling for demographic, clinical, and other personality variables) revealed a significant interaction between social support and conscientiousness. However, inconsistent with prediction, high support among patients with low conscientiousness was associated with poorer fluid-intake adherence, while support had little effect on fluid-intake adherence among high conscientiousness patients. No main or interactive effects were found for support or conscientiousness on a measure of medication adherence.


Obesity | 2016

Effects of a mindfulness‐based weight loss intervention in adults with obesity: A randomized clinical trial

Jennifer Daubenmier; Patricia J. Moran; Jean L. Kristeller; Michael Acree; Peter Bacchetti; Margaret E. Kemeny; Mary F. Dallman; Robert H. Lustig; Carl Grunfeld; Douglas F. Nixon; Jeffrey M. Milush; Veronica Goldman; Barbara Laraia; Kevin D. Laugero; Leslie R. Woodhouse; Elissa S. Epel; Frederick Hecht

To determine whether adding mindfulness‐based eating and stress management practices to a diet‐exercise program improves weight loss and metabolic syndrome components.


Brain Behavior and Immunity | 2015

Tired telomeres: Poor global sleep quality, perceived stress, and telomere length in immune cell subsets in obese men and women.

Aric A. Prather; Blake T. Gurfein; Patricia J. Moran; Jennifer Daubenmier; Michael Acree; Peter Bacchetti; Elizabeth Sinclair; Jue Lin; Elizabeth H. Blackburn; Frederick Hecht; Elissa S. Epel

Poor sleep quality and short sleep duration are associated with increased incidence and progression of a number of chronic health conditions observed at greater frequency among the obese and those experiencing high levels of stress. Accelerated cellular aging, as indexed by telomere attrition in immune cells, is a plausible pathway linking sleep and disease risk. Prior studies linking sleep and telomere length are mixed. One factor may be reliance on leukocytes, which are composed of varied immune cell types, as the sole measure of telomere length. To better clarify these associations, we investigated the relationships of global sleep quality, measured by the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI), and diary-reported sleep duration with telomere length in different immune cell subsets, including granulocytes, peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs), CD8+ and CD4+ T lymphocytes, and B lymphocytes in a sample of 87 obese men and women (BMI mean=35.4, SD=3.6; 81.6% women; 62.8% Caucasian). Multiple linear regression analyses were performed adjusting for age, gender, race, education, BMI, sleep apnea risk, and perceived stress. Poorer PSQI global sleep quality was associated with statistically significantly shorter telomere length in lymphocytes but not granulocytes and in particular CD8+ T cells (b=-56.8 base pairs per one point increase in PSQI, SE=20.4, p=0.007) and CD4+ T cells (b=-37.2, SE=15.9, p=0.022). Among separate aspects of global sleep quality, low perceived sleep quality and decrements in daytime function were most related to shorter telomeres. In addition, perceived stress moderated the sleep-CD8+ telomere association. Poorer global sleep quality predicted shorter telomere length in CD8+ T cells among those with high perceived stress but not in low stress participants. These findings provide preliminary evidence that poorer global sleep quality is related to telomere length in several immune cell types, which may serve as a pathway linking sleep and disease risk in obese individuals.

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Elissa S. Epel

University of California

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Michael Acree

University of California

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Susan Folkman

University of California

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