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Start Over You searched for: Topic descriptive statistics Remove constraint Topic: descriptive statistics Journal psychology & health Remove constraint Journal: psychology & health Region netherlands Remove constraint Region: netherlands Publisher taylor & francis ltd Remove constraint Publisher: taylor & francis ltd
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1. Does perceived risk influence the effects of message framing? A new investigation of a widely held notion.

2. Characteristics of patients in routine psycho-oncological care, and changes in outcome variables during and after their treatment.

3. Home-based smoking prevention program Smoke-free Kids on smoking-related cognitions: Secondary outcomes from a cluster randomized controlled trial.

4. A longitudinal case–control study on goals in adolescents with cancer.

5. Making snacking less sinful: (Counter-)moralising obesity in the public discourse differentially affects food choices of individuals with high and low perceived body mass.

6. Identifying the ‘if’ for ‘if-then’ plans: Combining implementation intentions with cue-monitoring targeting unhealthy snacking behaviour.

7. The unit size effect of indulgent food: How eating smaller sized items signals impulsivity and makes consumers eat less.

8. An experimental test of the relationship between voice intonation and persuasion in the domain of health.

9. Targeting cancer patients’ quality of life through social comparison: A randomised trial.

10. The effectiveness of a proactive coping intervention targeting self-management in diabetes patients.

11. Acceptance, well-being and goals in adolescents with chronic illness: a daily process analysis.

12. Examining direct and indirect pathways to health behaviour: The influence of cognitive and affective probability beliefs.

13. The relationship between emotion awareness and somatic complaints in children and adolescents: Investigating the mediating role of anxiety and depression.

14. Thinking versus feeling: Differentiating between cognitive and affective components of perceived cancer risk.

15. Effects of momentary assessed stressful events and worry episodes on somatic health complaints.