2019
Associations Between Maternal Experiences of Discrimination and Biomarkers of Toxic Stress in School-Aged Children
Condon EM, Holland ML, Slade A, Redeker NS, Mayes LC, Sadler LS. Associations Between Maternal Experiences of Discrimination and Biomarkers of Toxic Stress in School-Aged Children. Maternal And Child Health Journal 2019, 23: 1147-1151. PMID: 31222595, PMCID: PMC6660374, DOI: 10.1007/s10995-019-02779-4.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAdultBiomarkersBlack or African AmericanBlood PressureChildChild, PreschoolConnecticutC-Reactive ProteinCross-Sectional StudiesFemaleHair AnalysisHispanic or LatinoHumansInterleukin-1betaInterleukin-6Interleukin-8MaleMothersRacismSalivaSocioeconomic FactorsStress, PsychologicalTumor Necrosis Factor-alphaConceptsSalivary interleukin-6 levelsInterleukin-6 levelsMaternal experienceCross-sectional studyMaternal-child dyadsPoor health outcomesEthnic health inequitiesToxic stressSchool-Aged ChildrenChild healthNoninvasive biomarkersImmune pathwaysChild biomarkersHealth outcomesHealth inequitiesBiomarkersChildrenIndirect exposureLow-income neighborhoodsVicarious racismBiological mechanismsAdditional researchMothersExperiences of discriminationPhysiological mechanisms
2016
A Systematic Review of Self‐Management Interventions for Inflammatory Bowel Disease
Conley S, Redeker N. A Systematic Review of Self‐Management Interventions for Inflammatory Bowel Disease. Journal Of Nursing Scholarship 2016, 48: 118-127. PMID: 26756193, PMCID: PMC5480612, DOI: 10.1111/jnu.12189.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsInflammatory bowel diseaseSelf-management interventionsSelf-management skillsBowel diseaseSystematic reviewDisease-specific health-related qualityHealth-related qualityAllied Health LiteratureMeta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelinesHealth-related outcomesPreferred Reporting ItemsGeneric HRQOLDisease activityUlcerative colitisInclusion criteriaNursing careCumulative IndexReporting ItemsHealth LiteratureMost interventionsDiseaseSearch termsInterventionProQuest databasesAdditional research