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Faculty Publications

Psychosocial

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Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

Surgical Complications And Their Impact On Patients’ Psychosocial Well-Being: A Systematic Review And Meta-Analysis, Anna Pinto, Omar Faiz, Rachel E. Davis, Alex Almoudaris, Charles Vincent Feb 2016

Surgical Complications And Their Impact On Patients’ Psychosocial Well-Being: A Systematic Review And Meta-Analysis, Anna Pinto, Omar Faiz, Rachel E. Davis, Alex Almoudaris, Charles Vincent

Faculty Publications

Objective Surgical complications may affect patients psychologically due to challenges such as prolonged recovery or long-lasting disability. Psychological distress could further delay patients’ recovery as stress delays wound healing and compromises immunity. This review investigates whether surgical complications adversely affect patients’ postoperative well-being and the duration of this impact.

Methods The primary data sources were ‘PsychINFO’, ‘EMBASE’ and ‘MEDLINE’ through OvidSP (year 2000 to May 2012). The reference lists of eligible articles were also reviewed. Studies were eligible if they measured the association of complications after major surgery from 4 surgical specialties (ie, cardiac, thoracic, gastrointestinal and vascular) with adult …


Parental Report Versus Child Perception Of Familial Support: Which Is More Associated With Child Physical Activity And Television Use?, Daheia J. Barr-Anderson, Ramona Robinson-O'Brien, Jess Haines, Peter J. Hannan, Dianne R. Neumark-Sztainer May 2010

Parental Report Versus Child Perception Of Familial Support: Which Is More Associated With Child Physical Activity And Television Use?, Daheia J. Barr-Anderson, Ramona Robinson-O'Brien, Jess Haines, Peter J. Hannan, Dianne R. Neumark-Sztainer

Faculty Publications

Background: Parent-report and child perception of familial support for weight-related behaviors may not be congruent. This research explores whether parent-report or child perception is more strongly associated with child-reported physical activity and television (TV) use. Methods: Elementary school children (n = 73) participating in Ready. Set. ACTION!, a theater-based obesity prevention pilot program in Saint Paul, MN, and their parents completed surveys assessing familial support for physical activity and limitations on TV use in fall 2006. Paired t tests examined congruency between parent-report and child perception. Linear regression models adjusted for sociodemographics explored the associations between familial …