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Dive into the research topics where Robert G. Laforge is active.

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Featured researches published by Robert G. Laforge.


Health Psychology | 1999

INTERACTIVE VERSUS NONINTERACTIVE INTERVENTIONS AND DOSE-RESPONSE RELATIONSHIPS FOR STAGE-MATCHED SMOKING CESSATION PROGRAMS IN A MANAGED CARE SETTING

Wayne F. Velicer; James O. Prochaska; Joseph L. Fava; Robert G. Laforge; Joseph S. Rossi

This study compared interactive and noninteractive smoking cessation interventions for a population of smokers who were all members of 1 division of a managed care company. In addition, it examined whether a dose-response relationship existed. Screening was completed for 19,236 members who were contacted by telephone or mail. Of the 4,653 who were identified as smokers, 85.3% were enrolled. A 2 Intervention (interactive or noninteractive) x 4 Contacts (1, 2, 3, or 6 contacts) x 4 Occasions (0, 6, 12, and 18 months) design was used. The interactive intervention was stage-matched expert-system reports plus manuals; the noninteractive intervention was stage-matched manuals. Contact occurred in 1 of 4 series (1, 2, 3 or 6 contacts) at 3-month intervals. The expert system outperformed the stage-matched manuals, but there was no clear dose-response relationship for either intervention.


Health Psychology | 2004

Multiple risk expert systems interventions: impact of simultaneous stage-matched expert system interventions for smoking, high-fat diet, and sun exposure in a population of parents.

James O. Prochaska; Wayne F. Velicer; Joseph S. Rossi; Colleen A. Redding; Geoffrey W. Greene; Susan R. Rossi; Xiaowu Sun; Joseph L. Fava; Robert G. Laforge; Brett A. Plummer

Three stage-based expert system interventions for smoking, high-fat diet, and unsafe sun exposure were evaluated in a sample of 2,460 parents of teenagers. Eighty-four percent of the eligible parents were enrolled in a 2-arm randomized control trial, with the treatment group receiving individualized feedback reports for each of their relevant behaviors at 0, 6, and 12 months as well as a multiple behavior manual. At 24 months, the expert system outperformed the comparison condition across all 3 risk behaviors, resulting in 22% of the participants in action or maintenance for smoking (vs. 16% for the comparison condition), 34% for diet (vs. 26%), and 30% for sun exposure (vs. 22%). Proactive, home-based, and stage-matched expert systems can produce significant multiple behavior changes in at-risk populations where the majority of participants are not prepared to change.


Journal of Behavioral Medicine | 1994

Psychosocial factors influencing low fruit and vegetable consumption

Robert G. Laforge; Geoffrey W. Greene; James O. Prochaska

A major national health campaign has recently been initiated to promote consumption of 5 or more servings of fruits and vegetables each day. This paper investigates psychosocial factors related to fruit and vegetable consumption to understand better who might be receptive and who might resist the national 5-A-Day campaign. We studied 405 adult respondents to a random-digit dial telephone survey. Applying the Transtheoretical Model, respondents were classified by stage of readiness to adopt the practice of eating 5 or more fruits and vegetables each day. Logistic regression models were developed for persons consuming 2 or fewer servings daily and for persons in the Precontemplation stage. Education was directly related to fruit and vegetable intake and indirectly related to being in the Precontemplation stage. Males were twice as likely as females to be in the Precontemplation stage and eat fewer than 2 servings a day. Of special interest, respondents with children at home were at greater risk of eating 2 or fewer servings a day than those without children at home (OR=1.63; 95% CI, 1.06–2.52). These results imply that stage of readiness to change should be considered as well as other factors in planning interventions for increasing fruit and vegetable consumption.


Journal of Aging and Health | 1992

The Relationship of Vision and Hearing Impairment to One-Year Mortality and Functional Decline

Robert G. Laforge; William D. Spector; Josef Sternberg

Impairments in hearing and vision are common for those aged 65 and older, and severe impairments may result in dependencies in daily activities. This article presents a longitudinal analysis of the risk of dying, or experiencing increased dependency in activities of daily living (ADLs) or instrumental activities of daily living (IADLs) for persons with self-rated hearing and/or visual impairment. The data are from baseline and 1-year follow-up of the GAO-Cleveland study of 1,408 community-dwelling elders. Bivariate and multiple logistic regression analyses were performed. Vision impairments and, to a lesser extent, hearing impairments were found to be significant risk factors for functional decline. After adjustment for age, sex, and cognitive status, persons who were otherwise free of functional dependency at baseline but who had only vision impairment or both vision and hearing impairments were 2.5 and 3.5 times more likely to experience functional decline than were unimpaired elderly persons, respectively. Those similarly impaired, but with IADL disability, were 1.8 and 2.5 times more likely to experience functional decline than were unimpaired elderly. Policy implications of these findings are discussed.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 1992

Emergence and nosocomial transmission of ampicillin-resistant enterococci.

John M. Boyce; Steven M. Opal; Gail Potter-Bynoe; Robert G. Laforge; Marcus J. Zervos; G Furtado; Gary Victor; Antone A. Medeiros

Between 1986 and 1988, the incidence of ampicillin-resistant enterococci increased sevenfold at a university-affiliated hospital. Forty-three patients acquired nosocomial infections with ampicillin-resistant enterococci, most of which were also resistant to mezlocillin, piperacillin, and imipenem. An analysis of plasmid and chromosomal DNAs of isolates revealed that the increase was due to an epidemic of 19 nosocomial infections that yielded closely related strains of Enterococcus faecium and to a significant increase in the incidence of nonepidemic, largely unrelated strains of ampicillin-resistant enterococci. The nonepidemic strains were identified as E. faecium, E. raffinosus, E. durans, and E. gallinarum. A logistic regression analysis revealed that patients with nonepidemic resistant strains were 16 times more likely than controls to have received preceding therapy with imipenem. In our institution, the increase in the incidence of ampicillin-resistant enterococci appears to be due to the selection of various strains of resistant enterococci by the use of imipenem and to the nosocomial transmission of E. faecium and E. raffinosus. Images


Addictive Behaviors | 2001

The College Alcohol Problems Scale

Jason E. Maddock; Robert G. Laforge; Joseph S. Rossi; Thomas O'Hare

A short, reliable two-factor instrument measuring drinking-related negative consequences was developed from a previous measure using two samples of college students. In Study I, data on alcohol use and problems associated with alcohol use were collected on 382 introductory psychology students. The original College Alcohol Problems Scale (CAPS) was tested and found to fit the data poorly. Sequential methods were used to develop a revised instrument. Principal components analyses (PCA) on half of the sample were conducted on 20 items written to measure negative consequences related to college student drinking. Results indicated a two-factor solution measuring social and emotional problems. Confirmatory factor analyses (CFA) on the other half of the sample confirmed the two-factor structure. Further refinement of the instrument resulted in the revised CAPS (CAPS-r), an eight-item two-factor scale. In Study II, the response format was altered to coincide with the Young Adult Problem Screening Test. A total of 726 students completed the instrument as part of a university-wide random sample. CFA showed that the hypothesized model fit well across all measures of model fit and the factor structure was invariant across gender. Additional analyses revealed that the scale was internally consistent and externally valid. A short reliable and valid measure of alcohol-related problems is needed to enable low-cost data collection on college campuses across the nation, as well as to facilitate program evaluation and routine epidemiological surveillance and monitoring.


Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology | 2010

Brief motivational and parent interventions for college students: A randomized factorial study

Mark D. Wood; Anne M. Fairlie; Anne C. Fernandez; Brian Borsari; Christy Capone; Robert G. Laforge; Rosa Carmona-Barros

OBJECTIVE Using a randomized factorial design, we examined the efficacy of a brief motivational intervention (BMI) and a parent-based intervention (PBI) as universal preventive interventions to reduce alcohol use among incoming college students. METHOD Participants (N = 1,014) were assessed prior to matriculation and at 10 months and 22 months postbaseline. Two-part latent growth modeling was used to simultaneously examine initiation and growth in heavy episodic drinking and alcohol-related consequences. RESULTS This study retained 90.8% (n = 921) of randomized students at the 10-month follow-up and 84.0% (n = 852) of randomized students at the 22-month follow-up. BMI participants were significantly less likely than non-BMI participants to initiate heavy episodic drinking and to begin experiencing alcohol-related consequences. Effect sizes were minimal at 10 months (Cohens h ranged from 0.02 to 0.07) and were small at 22 months (hs ranged from 0.15 to 0.22). A significant BMI x PBI interaction revealed that students receiving both the BMI and the PBI were significantly less likely to report the onset of consequences beyond the sum of the individual intervention effects (h = 0.08 at 10 months, and h = 0.21 at 22 months). Hypothesized direct BMI effects for reductions in heavy episodic drinking and consequences were not observed. Significant mediated effects via changes in descriptive norms were present for both growth and initiation of heavy episodic drinking and consequences. CONCLUSIONS To our knowledge, the current study is the first to provide support for BMI as a universal preventive intervention for incoming college students. Although hypothesized PBI main effects were not found, mediation analyses suggest future refinements could enhance PBI effectiveness.


Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research | 2004

Approaches to Brief Intervention for Hazardous Drinking in Young People

John B. Saunders; Kypros Kypri; Scott T. Walters; Robert G. Laforge; Mary E. Larimer

This article represents the proceedings of a symposium at the 2002 joint conference of the Research Society on Alcoholism and the International Society for Biomedical Research on Alcoholism in San Francisco. The chair was John B. Saunders. The focus of the symposium was on brief intervention approaches for hazardous drinking among young people. The presentations were (1) Evidence for the effectiveness of brief intervention as an approach to reducing hazardous alcohol use, by John B. Saunders; (2) College student hazardous drinking in New Zealand, the USA, UK, and Australia: implications for research, policy, and intervention, by Kypros Kypri; (3) Applications of motivational feedback on the college campus, by Scott T. Walters; (4) A population based individualized alcohol harm reduction feedback intervention: preliminary results from the college-based alcohol risk reduction (CBARR) trial, by Robert G. Laforge; and (5) Brief interventions: conclusions and future directions, by Mary E. Larimer.


Annals of Behavioral Medicine | 2002

Challenges to Improving the Impact of Worksite Cancer Prevention Programs: Comparing Reach, Enrollment, and Attrition Using Active Versus Passive Recruitment Strategies

Laura Linnan; Karen M. Emmons; Neil Klar; Joseph L. Fava; Robert G. Laforge; David B. Abrams

Objective: The impact of worksite intervention studies is maximized when reach and enrollment are high and attrition is low. Differences in reach, enrollment, and retention were investigated by comparing 2 different employee recruitment methods for a home-based cancer-prevention intervention study. Methods: Twenty-two worksites (N = 10,014 employees) chose either active or passive methods to recruit employees into a home-based intervention study. Reach (e.g., number of employees who gave permission to be called at home), Enrollment (e.g., number of employees who joined the home intervention study), and Attrition (e.g., number who did not complete the 12- and 24-month follow-ups) were determined. Analysis at the cluster level assessed differences between worksites that selected active (n =12) versus passive (n = 10) recruitment methods on key outcomes of interest. Employees recruited by passive methods had significantly higher reach (74.5% vs. 24.4% for active) but significantly lower enrollment (41% vs. 78%) and retention (54% vs. 70%) rates (all ps = .0001). Passive methods also successfully enrolled a more diverse, high-risk employee sample. Passive (vs. active) recruitment methods hold advantages for increased reach and the ability to retain a more representative employee sample. Implications of these results for the design of future worksite studies that involve multilevel recruitment methods are discussed.


Tobacco Control | 1998

Measuring support for tobacco control policy in selected areas of six countries

Robert G. Laforge; W. F Velicer; D. A Levesque; J. L Fava; D. J Hill; P. E Schofield; D. Fan; H. de Vries; W. O Shisana; Mark Conner

OBJECTIVE To explore the validity, reliability, and applicability of using a short, psychometrically sound survey instrument to measure population attitudes toward tobacco control policies. DESIGN Surveys. SUBJECTS AND SETTING Student respondents attending university in Australia (n = 403), Hong Kong (n = 336), the Netherlands (n = 351), South Africa (n = 291), the United Kingdom (n = 164) and the United States (n = 241); total n = 1786. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE The Smoking Policy Inventory (SPI), a 35-item scale. SPI scores were adjusted for age, income, gender, and smoking status. Estimates of internal consistency and tests of factorial invariance were conducted in each sample. RESULTS Across all six countries, the SPI was found to be highly reliable and to have a consistent factor structure, indicating that the SPI scale represents a higher order construct that assesses general attitudes about tobacco control policy with five dimensions. In general, the degree of endorsement of anti-tobacco policies as measured by the SPI reflected the extent and strength of tobacco control legislation in those countries. Dutch students were the least likely, and Australian and Hong Kong students the most likely, to support tobacco control policies. CONCLUSIONS It is possible to develop appropriate and meaningful measurement tools for assessing support of tobacco control policies. Strong evidence was found for internal reliability and structural invariance of the SPI. The SPI may be a useful mechanism for monitoring ongoing policy initiatives, making cross-cultural comparisons, and evaluating population receptiveness to proposed policy approaches.

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Wayne F. Velicer

University of Rhode Island

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Joseph S. Rossi

University of Rhode Island

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Jason E. Maddock

University of Hawaii at Manoa

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Mark D. Wood

University of Rhode Island

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Brian Borsari

University of California

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Brett A. Plummer

University of Rhode Island

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