Zorash Montaño
Arizona State University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Zorash Montaño.
Journal of Pediatric Psychology | 2012
Nicole E. Mahrer; Zorash Montaño; Jeffrey I. Gold
OBJECTIVE To further understand the influence of psychological variables on pain and functioning in children with chronic pain by examining the relations between pain, anxiety sensitivity (AS), somatization, and health-related quality of life (HRQOL), and whether they vary as a function of age and gender. METHODS 66 children (8-12 years) and adolescents (13-18 years) with chronic pain completed measures assessing pain intensity, AS (childhood anxiety sensitivity index), somatization (child somatization inventory), and HRQOL (pediatric quality of life inventory 4.0). RESULTS Somatization was significantly related to higher pain intensity. Somatization significantly predicted HRQOL over and above pain. AS was a significant predictor of impaired HRQOL for children and females in the sample, but not for adolescents or males. CONCLUSION Somatization and AS may be better predictors of HRQOL impairment than pain intensity in children with chronic pain. This may differ as a function of age and gender.
Journal of Traumatic Stress | 2013
Nancy Kassam-Adams; Jeffrey I. Gold; Zorash Montaño; Kristen L. Kohser; Anai Cuadra; Cynthia E. Muñoz; F. Daniel Armstrong
Clinicians and researchers need tools for accurate early assessment of childrens acute stress reactions and acute stress disorder (ASD). There is a particular need for independently validated Spanish-language measures. The current study reports on 2 measures of child acute stress (a self-report checklist and a semistructured interview), describing the development of the Spanish version of each measure and psychometric evaluation of both the Spanish and English versions. Children between the ages of 8 to 17 years who had experienced a recent traumatic event completed study measures in Spanish (n = 225) or in English (n = 254). Results provide support for reliability (internal consistency of the measures in both languages ranged from .83 to .89; cross-language reliability of the checklist was .93) and for convergent validity (with later PTSD symptoms, and with concurrent anxiety symptoms). Comparing checklist and interview results revealed a strong association between severity scores within the Spanish and English samples. Differences between the checklist and interview in evaluating the presence of ASD appear to be linked to different content coverage for dissociation symptoms. Future studies should further assess the impact of differing assessment modes, content coverage, and the use of these measures in children with diverse types of acute trauma exposure in English- and Spanish-speaking children.
Health Psychology Review | 2018
Justin D. Smith; Kaitlyn N. Egan; Zorash Montaño; Spring Dawson-McClure; Danielle E. Jake-Schoffman; Madeline Larson; Sara M. St. George
ABSTRACT Considering the immense challenge of preventing obesity, the time has come to reconceptualise the way we study the obesity development in childhood. The developmental cascade model offers a longitudinal framework to elucidate the way cumulative consequences and spreading effects of risk and protective factors, across and within biopsychosocial spheres and phases of development, can propel individuals towards obesity. In this article, we use a theory-driven model-building approach and a scoping review that included 310 published studies to propose a developmental cascade model of paediatric obesity. The proposed model provides a basis for testing hypothesised cascades with multiple intervening variables and complex longitudinal processes. Moreover, the model informs future research by resolving seemingly contradictory findings on pathways to obesity previously thought to be distinct (low self-esteem, consuming sugary foods, and poor sleep cause obesity) that are actually processes working together over time (low self-esteem causes consumption of sugary foods which disrupts sleep quality and contributes to obesity). The findings of such inquiries can aid in identifying the timing and specific targets of preventive interventions across and within developmental phases. The implications of such a cascade model of paediatric obesity for health psychology and developmental and prevention sciences are discussed.
Frontiers in Public Health | 2018
Justin D. Smith; Cady Berkel; Jenna Rudo-Stern; Zorash Montaño; Sara M. St. George; Guillermo Prado; Anne M. Mauricio; Amanda Chiapa; Meg Bruening; Thomas J. Dishion
Implementation experts have recently argued for a process of “scaling out” evidence-based interventions, programs, and practices (EBPs) to improve reach to new populations and new service delivery systems. A process of planned adaptation is typically required to integrate EBPs into new service delivery systems and address the needs of targeted populations while simultaneously maintaining fidelity to core components. This process-oriented paper describes the application of an implementation science framework and coding system to the adaptation of the Family Check-Up (FCU), for a new clinical target and service delivery system—prevention of obesity and excess weight game in primary care. The original FCU has demonstrated both short- and long-term effects on obesity with underserved families across a wide age range. The advantage of adapting such a program is the existing empirical evidence that the intervention improves the primary mediator of effects on the new target outcome. We offer a guide for determining the levels of evidence to undertake the adaptation of an existing EBP for a new clinical target. In this paper, adaptation included shifting the frame of the intervention from one of risk reduction to health promotion; adding health-specific assessments in the areas of nutrition, physical activity, sleep, and media parenting behaviors; family interaction tasks related to goals for health and health behaviors; and coordinating with community resources for physical health. We discuss the multi-year process of adaptation that began by engaging the FCU developer, community stakeholders, and families, which was then followed by a pilot feasibility study, and continues in an ongoing randomized effectiveness-implementation hybrid trial. The adapted program is called the Family Check-Up 4 Health (FCU4Health). We apply a comprehensive coding system for the adaptation of EBPs to our process and also provide a side-by-side comparison of behavior change techniques for obesity prevention and management used in the original FCU and in the FCU4Health. These provide a rigorous means of classification as well as a common language that can be used when adapting other EBPs for context, content, population, or clinical target. Limitations of such an approach to adaptation and future directions of this work are discussed.
Pain management | 2011
Angela Li; Zorash Montaño; Vincent J Chen; Jeffrey I. Gold
Prevention Science | 2015
Justin D. Smith; Zorash Montaño; Thomas J. Dishion; Daniel S. Shaw; Melvin N. Wilson
Journal of Family Psychology | 2014
Jessie J. Wong; Nancy A. Gonzales; Zorash Montaño; Larry E. Dumka; Roger E. Millsap
American journal of disaster medicine | 2009
Jeffrey I. Gold; Zorash Montaño; Shields S; Nicole E. Mahrer; Vibhakar; Ybarra T; Yee N; Jeffery S. Upperman; Nancy Blake; Kathleen Stevenson; Alan L. Nager
Appetite | 2015
Zorash Montaño; Justin D. Smith; Thomas J. Dishion; Daniel S. Shaw; Melvin N. Wilson
Journal of Child and Family Studies | 2011
Zorash Montaño; Nicole E. Mahrer; Alan L. Nager; Ilene Claudius; Jeffrey I. Gold