87 results on '"Powell, Sara"'
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2. Additive vs. redundant properties of theory in the advancement of weight-control behaviors within community-based obesity treatments in lower- to lower-middle income women
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Annesi, James J. and Powell, Sara M.
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- 2024
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3. Psychosocial Predictors of Maintained Weight Loss in Women: Informing Behavioral Obesity Treatment Foci
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Annesi, James J. and Powell, Sara M.
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- 2024
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4. Sequential mediation path from moderate exercise to weight loss through social cognitive theory variables
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Annesi, James J. and Powell, Sara M.
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Exercise -- Health aspects -- Methods -- Psychological aspects ,Psychological research ,Weight loss -- Methods -- Psychological aspects ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
An improved understanding of psychosocial factors and their dynamic changes and interrelations is required to increase comprehension of the effects of exercise on weight loss. Women (N = 99) participating in a theory-based, community-administered obesity program focused on self-regulation of weight-loss behaviors were assessed. Analyses of a theory- and causal chain-driven sequential multiple mediation model affirmed the hypothesized path from moderate exercise[right arrow]decreased negative mood[right arrow]increased self-regulation[right arrow]increased self-efficacy[right arrow]improved weight-loss behaviors[right arrow]weight loss over 6 months. Alternate significant paths within the model reinforced an expected relationship between exercise-associated decrease in negative mood and increased self-regulation. Although completion/non-completion of the equivalent of 3 moderate bouts of exercise/week was significantly related to weight loss in bivariate analyses, it was no longer significant when the above mediators were sequentially entered. The mean observed loss of weight was -7.6%. Findings lent direction to more extensive and controlled research that could inform improvements in behavioral obesity treatments., Author(s): James J. Annesi [sup.1] [sup.2] [sup.3] , Sara M. Powell [sup.2] Author Affiliations: (1) Central Coast YMCA, , Monterey, CA, USA (2) grid.253562.5, 0000 0004 0385 7165, California State [...]
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- 2023
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5. Exploring the Influence of Self-Efficacy and Autonomy on Outdoor Recreation Behaviors during the COVID-19 Pandemic
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Powell, Sara M., Carpenter, Katheryn E., Novik, Melinda G., and Gibson, Hugh M.
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Outdoor Recreation (OR) provides the benefits of physical activity (PA) and traditional leisure placed in an outdoor environment. Motivation, self-efficacy, and autonomy can increase depending on the physical and social environment. This study explored the relationship between self-efficacy and autonomy on OR behaviors and identified barriers and supporters to OR during the COVID-19 pandemic. Survey information was collected from 995 U.S. adults (93.6% white, 64.0% female) regarding OR behaviors, changes in OR during COVID-19, and OR self-perceptions. Significant positive correlations existed between autonomy and self-efficacy (r = 0.138, p < 0.01), and self-efficacy and pre/post pandemic OR behaviors 2020 (r = 0.158, p < 0.01), (r = 0.129, p < 0.01) respectively. Qualitative data implied barriers and supporters to OR as: social, psychological health, and increased or changed OR/PA. Implications from this research are beneficial to OR and health professionals to promote overall physical and psychological well-being for OR participants.
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- 2023
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6. Stress and Physical Activity in COVID-19 Exploratory Study (SPACES)
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Powell, Sara M., Bushman, Barbara A., Goddard, Stacy E., Scace, Delaney A., and Klabunde, Ryanne S.
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The COVID-19 pandemic presents many concerns, including stress. Physical activity (PA) can help decrease stress. Thus, the purpose of this study was to examine the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on stress and PA levels of U.S. adults. Mixed-methods data were collected from adults (N = 464, 73.3% female, 87.5% white) examining levels of stress and PA, as well as changes in PA and various factors that impacted PA. A decrease in PA habits was reported by 55.3% during the lockdown period and by 48.6% currently when compared to pre-pandemic. Nearly half of participants (41.8%) met recommended PA guidelines, and experienced moderate levels of perceived stress. Significant differences in stress were found for those who indicated the pandemic altered current exercise compared to pre-pandemic (F(2,362) = 3.67, p = 0.026, [eta-squared] = 0.020), and among stress levels for those who met both, one, or neither cardio or muscular strength PA guidelines (F(2,456) = 4.97, p = .007, [eta-squared] = 0.021). Additionally, 225 participants provided open-ended responses; qualitative themes identified include change of exercise environment, increased or decreased frequency of PA, psychological changes, and change in PA intensity or type. During the pandemic, most respondents experienced changes in PA; decreases in PA were associated with loss of access to PA spaces during lockdown or psychological changes such as negative mood state or lack of motivation.
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- 2023
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7. Effective Word-Problem Instruction: Using Schemas to Facilitate Mathematical Reasoning
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Powell, Sara R. and Fuchs, Lynn S.
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Many general and special education teachers across the U.S. teach word problems by defining problems as a single operation (e.g., "Today, we're working on subtraction word problems") and linking key words (e.g., more, altogether, share, twice) to specific operations (e.g., share means to divide). Unfortunately, teaching students to approach word problems in these ways discourages mathematical reasoning and frequently produces incorrect answers. In Table 1, we list eight common key words, identify the operation typically associated with each, and provide word problems that illustrate how reliance on key words can result in incorrect answers. Neither of these approaches--defining problems in terms of a single operation or linking key words to specific operations--has evidence to support its use. [This article was published in "Teaching Exceptional Children" v51 p31-42 2018 (EJ1190453).]
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- 2018
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8. Do it for the cause: Feasibility of a theory-based virtual 5 K walk/run program to increase physical activity behavior
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Bramblett, Paige N., Fasczewski, Kimberly S., and Powell, Sara M.
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- 2023
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9. Pressure, Stress, and Coping: Exploring the Professional Demands of NCAA Division I Coaching
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Powell, Sara M., Fasczewski, Kimberly S., Stevens, Nick, Jr., Tocci, Nicholas D., Jewell, Skylar, Blumberg, Jacob, and Cangas, M. Anthony
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Coping (Psychology) -- Methods ,Coaches (Athletics) -- Psychological aspects ,Job stress -- Management ,College sports -- Psychological aspects ,Psychological research ,Company business management ,Psychology and mental health ,Sports and fitness ,NCAA -- Officials and employees - Abstract
Research suggests that the position of a collegiate sport coach is a performance position. It has been documented that an immense amount of stress comes with coaching, and common stressors reported relate to team performance and work-life balance, however a gap in the literature exists in understanding the factors that cause stress when considering coaching as a high-stress profession. This study aimed to understand the job-related stressors experienced by NCAA Division I head and assistant coaches. Twenty-two participants, including 12 head and 10 assistant coaches at three mid-major NCAA Division I universities, participated in semi-structured interviews. Four main themes emerged: coaching responsibilities, performance expectations, uncontrollable situations in and out of competition, and coping strategies. Sources of stress reported by the majority of coaches related to feeling pressed for time and maintaining work-life balance, providing leadership and motivation to athletes, and producing successful outcomes of competitive seasons to maintain job security. Coping strategies were identified as methods to improve psychological and physical health as well as spending time with loved ones. This information may be used to develop psychological skills interventions to reduce the amount of stress experienced by both head and assistant coaches at the Division I collegiate level. Keywords: coaching; stress; coping strategies; collegiate athletics; NCAA Division I, The job of a collegiate National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I (DI) coach consists of recruiting athletes, monitoring team and athlete performance, providing leadership to athletes and coaching staff, [...]
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- 2022
10. Carry-Over of Exercise-Related Self-Regulation to Eating-Related Self-Regulation in Women Participating in Behavioral Obesity Treatments.
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Annesi, James J. and Powell, Sara M.
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DIETARY patterns , *FOOD habits , *OBESITY in women , *PHYSICAL activity , *OBESITY - Abstract
Purpose: Because obesity has not responded well to instructing affected adults in healthier eating behaviors and increased physical activity/exercise, enhanced research on psychosocial determinants of those behavioral changes is needed. Intervention foci on self-regulation have been suggested, but targeted research is required. Method: Women with obesity participated in community-based treatments that were either self-regulation-focused (self-regulation emphasis group; n = 52) or typical instruction-based (education [treatment-as-usual] group; n = 54). Results: There were overall significant increases in exercise-related self-regulation, physical activity/exercise, exercise-related self-efficacy, and eating-related self-regulation that were each significantly more pronounced in the self-regulation emphasis group. Increase in exercise-related self-regulation over 3 months predicted eating-related self-regulation over 6 months; however, sequential entry of changes in physical activity and exercise-related self-efficacy significantly mediated that relationship. However, only the path from changes in exercise-related self-regulation to exercise self-efficacy to eating-related self-regulation was significant. In a revised model where change in exercise self-efficacy was the sole mediator, treatment group did not significantly moderate the exercise self-regulation to eating self-regulation change relationship, but full mediation of that relationship occurred. Conclusion: Findings indicated salience for perceived ability/self-efficacy for physical activity, over actual physical activity progress, and its role in the transfer of self-regulatory skills from an exercise to eating context. Increased eating self-regulation significantly predicted weight loss over 6, 12, and 24 months. In the self-regulation emphasis group that translated to meaningful weight loss/weight-loss maintenance of greater than 5% of initial weight. Findings contributed to an increased understanding of psychosocial-change processes within obesity treatment research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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11. Temporal Aspects of Psychosocial Mediators of the Exercise-Weight Loss Maintenance Relationship Within Scalable Behavior-Change Treatments.
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Annesi, James J. and Powell, Sara M.
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- 2024
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12. “Strong, fearless, tough, enduring”: Collegiate male wrestlers’ perceptions of body image and masculinity
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Fasczewski, Kimberly S., Powell, Sara M., Stevens, Nolasco R., and Skinner, Jared W.
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- 2022
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13. Moving beyond College Sports: Participants' Views of the 'Moving On!' Transition Program
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Davis Brooks, DeAnne, Reifsteck, Erin J., Powell, Sara M., and Gill, Diane L.
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The transition out of college sports can impact the health and well-being of former student-athletes who may face challenges with maintaining a physically active lifestyle beyond the structured environment of competitive athletics. Moving On! is an evidence-based, theory-driven transition program designed to help student-athletes plan for lifetime physical activity after college. The program incorporates tenets of identity theory and self-determination theory and includes group discussion activities along with introductory experiences in varied lifetime physical activities. To investigate the perspectives of program participants, senior student-athletes provided feedback on their experiences in the program through focus group interviews. Findings suggested that participants viewed the program as a valuable and positive experience, anchored by a change in consciousness that reflected expanded understandings of identity and its impact on physical activity. Participants cited helpful program elements including hands-on physical activity experiences, a program workbook, and goal-setting strategies for integrating physical activity into their future lives. Results from this study may inform other kinesiology and higher education professionals interested in implementing health-promoting college transition programs.
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- 2019
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14. Impacts of early psychological changes on correlates of weight‐loss maintenance: Seeking increased precision for sustained behavioural obesity treatment effects.
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Annesi, James J., Powell, Sara M., and Stewart, Francine A.
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WEIGHT loss , *PHYSICAL activity , *OBESITY , *PSYCHOLOGICAL factors , *PUBLIC health - Abstract
Issue Addressed Methods Results Conclusions So What? Obesity is an increasing worldwide health issue. In affluent English‐speaking countries, obesity ranges from ~28% (Australia) to ~42% (United States) of the adult population. Enabling weight loss beyond an initial 6 months is an unresolved challenge.Women with obesity participated in community‐based obesity treatments incorporating either cognitive‐behavioural methods emphasizing self‐regulatory skills development (n = 106) or typical information/education processes (n = 47). Psychosocial, behavioural, and weight changes were measured.Significant overall improvements in exercise‐related self‐regulation and self‐efficacy, mood, physical activity/exercise (PA/exercise), diet, and weight were found from baseline–month 6 (weight‐loss phase) and baseline–month 12, but not from months 6–12 (weight‐loss maintenance phase). Significantly greater improvements were found in the cognitive‐behavioural group. Within the weight‐loss phase, changes in both PA/exercise and diet significantly contributed to the explained variance in weight loss, whereas within the weight‐loss maintenance phase, only change in PA/exercise was a significant predictor. There was no significant relationship of weight loss across phases. Months 6–12 change in PA/exercise significantly mediated relationships of changes in self‐regulation→weight, mood→weight, and self‐efficacy→weight. Earlier scores and score changes in mood and self‐efficacy significantly impacted the subsequent parallel relationships.Cognitive‐behavioural methods affect psychosocial changes leading to initial changes in diet, PA/exercise, and weight. Those changes then impact subsequent changes in PA/exercise—a primary malleable correlate of maintained weight loss.This research extended previous findings to better‐inform behavioural obesity‐treatment foci to address the pervasive public health problem of attaining and sustaining weight loss. Findings related to PA/exercise will help impact health‐promotion outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. Obesity treatment-associated transfer of exercise-related self-regulation to eating-related self-regulation changes in women.
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Annesi, James J. and Powell, Sara M.
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OBESITY treatment , *COMMUNITY health services , *EXERCISE , *REGULATION of body weight , *SELF-control , *BEHAVIOR , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *HEALTH behavior , *FOOD habits , *WOMEN'S health services , *WOMEN'S health , *AFFECT (Psychology) , *DATA analysis software , *BEHAVIOR therapy - Abstract
Obesity in the United States has risen to 42 percent of its adult population and is similarly problematic in many other countries. Although the U.S. government has provided education on healthy eating and the need to exercise regularly, behavioral obesity treatments have largely failed to sustain reductions in weight. Self-regulation, and the incorporation of exercise for its psychological impacts on eating, has sometimes been targeted. While there has been sporadic investigation into the carry-over of exercise-related self-regulation to eating-related self-regulation, the present aim is to further inquiry in that area to inform future treatment content for improved effects. Women enrolled in community-based obesity treatments with either a self-regulation (n = 106) or education (n = 54) focus were assessed on changes in exercise- and eating-related self-regulation, negative mood, completed exercise, and weight. Improvements were significantly greater in the self-regulation-focused group. After controlling for initial change in eating-related self-regulation, change in that measure from Month 3 to 6 was significantly predicted by change in exercise-related self-regulation during the initial 3 treatment months. This suggested a carry-over effect. A stronger predictive relationship was associated with the self-regulation-focused treatment. In further analyses, paths from changes in exercise→negative mood→self-regulation of both exercise and eating were significant. Increase in eating-related self-regulation was significantly associated with weight loss over 6, 12, and 24 months. The self-regulation-focused group had stronger relationships, again. Findings suggested utility in targeting exercise-related self-regulation to impact later change in eating-related self-regulation, and the use of exercise-associated mood improvement to bolster participants' self-regulation capabilities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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16. Disordered Eating Attitudes and Behaviors of Dietetics Students
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Novotny, Daniela, Matthews, Eric, and Powell, Sara M.
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- 2021
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17. Viral Vector Reprogramming of Adult Resident Striatal Oligodendrocytes into Functional Neurons
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Weinberg, Marc S., Criswell, Hugh E., Powell, Sara K., Bhatt, Aadra P., and McCown, Thomas J.
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- 2017
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18. The Role of Change in Self-efficacy in Maintaining Exercise-Associated Improvements in Mood Beyond the Initial 6 Months of Expected Weight Loss in Women with Obesity.
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Annesi, James J. and Powell, Sara M.
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OBESITY treatment , *REGULATION of body weight , *LIFESTYLES , *AFFECT (Psychology) , *SELF-control , *SELF-efficacy , *WEIGHT loss , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *HEALTH behavior , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *EXERCISE therapy , *WOMEN'S health , *COGNITIVE therapy , *GROUP process - Abstract
Background: Although mechanisms are unclear, there is a robust association between exercise and mood improvements. However, beyond ~ 6 months of expected weight loss, weight-management behaviors such as exercise wane as weight gradually regains in most adults. The amount of exercise required to maintain mood improvement is unknown, as is the possible role of theory-based psychosocial changes associated with treatment such as in self-efficacy. Methods: Women who volunteered for a community-based cognitive-behavioral obesity treatment emphasizing exercise and building self-efficacy via self-regulating through lifestyle challenges/barriers, and were of the 86% who reduced their negative mood during its initial 6 months, were allocated into groups who either maintained their negative mood reduction (Sustain group, n = 43) or reverted toward initial levels of negative mood (Revert group, n = 73) during months 6–24. A binary stepwise logistic regression analysis assessed whether exercise amount and/or change in self-efficacy significantly classified Sustain vs. Revert group membership. Results: Change in exercise amount was not significantly associated with group membership. However, after additional entry of change in exercise self-efficacy, a significant association was found — successfully classifying 70% and 42% of the Revert and Sustain group participants, respectively. When self-efficacy change was entered as the sole independent variable, group membership was classified with 62% accuracy, overall (96% in the Revert group). Conclusions: Consistent with behavioral explanations of the exercise-mood change relationship, it was interpreted that self-efficacy, rather than exercise amount, was an important correlate of mood change beyond month 6. Suggestions for bolstering self-efficacy later in behavioral obesity treatments were provided. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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19. Lessons learned about online engagement and implementation of an intuitive eating programme for university employees.
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Gnau, Jaime, Novik, Melinda G., Powell, Sara M., and Novotny, Daniela
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Background: Intuitive eating (IE) principles present an evidence-based strategy for improving one's relationship with food while reducing the incidence of weight cycling and health risks associated with chronic dieting and weight regain. Offering online programming provides improved access to education while reducing barriers to programme enrollment but is also associated with high rates of attrition. Aim: To examine the process of programme implementation and identify barriers and facilitators of engagement for an online IE programme for employees at a large Midwestern university. Methods: The web-based programme Finding Peace with Food: An Intuitive Eating Approach consisted of an online community with discussion prompts, 10 weekly modules containing videos, activities, and counsellor interviews and was developed using recognized health behaviour theory and evidence-based practices. Participants were university employees (n = 20). Qualitative data were assessed using a phenomenological approach to discern the themes of barriers and facilitators of programme participation. Participation rates were assessed using descriptive statistics. Results: All participants were Caucasian, 85% were female, and their ages ranged from 26–64. The module-based structure was well received. The primary barriers to participation were time constraints, overwhelming amount of information, and aversion to Flipgrid platform use. The quality and usefulness of the programme information were identified as facilitators of participation. Conclusion: Program participation was influenced by the time frame available to complete the programme modules and participants' ease of use of platform applications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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20. Effects of Women's Body Satisfaction, Emotional Eating, and Race on Short-, Mid-, and Long-term Weight Loss.
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Annesi, James J. and Powell, Sara M.
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OBESITY treatment , *COMMUNITY health services , *STATISTICAL models , *REPEATED measures design , *WEIGHT loss , *AFRICAN Americans , *BODY weight , *MULTIPLE regression analysis , *PSYCHOLOGY of women , *EMOTIONS , *WHITE people , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *RACE , *FOOD habits , *ANALYSIS of variance , *COGNITIVE therapy - Abstract
To improve understanding of psychosocial factors, their changes, and racial differences with implications for behavioral obesity treatments. Women with obesity of White (n = 64) and Black (n = 33) racial groups participated in cognitive-behavioral community-based obesity treatment and were assessed on body satisfaction, emotional eating, and weight changes over 3, 6, 12, and 24 months via mixed-model repeated-measures analysis of variance and stepwise multiple regression analyses. Baseline body satisfaction scores were significantly higher (P < 0.001) in Black participants. White participants had significantly higher (P = 0.04) emotional eating scores. Significant overall improvements (P < 0.001) in body satisfaction, emotional eating, and weight were found, with weight reduction significantly greater (P = 0.05) among the White women. Weight reductions were significantly predicted by changes in body satisfaction and emotional eating (R 2 = 0.12–0.20, P < 0.01). When racial group was entered into the analyses, the explained variance in weight change over 6 and 12 months significantly increased (P < 0.05). Findings suggest addressing body satisfaction, emotional eating, and racial differences by adjusting obesity treatment targets could improve outcomes. Research-to-practice needs include a control group and further identification/elucidation of other psychosocial and economic factors that might affect outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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21. Effect of Peripherally Infused Norepinephrine on Reducing Central Venous Catheter Utilization.
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Powell, Sara M., Faust, Andrew C., George, Stephy, Townsend, Richard, Eubank, Darla, and Kim, Richard
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- 2023
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22. Dynamic loading and redistribution of the Mcm2‐7 helicase complex through the cell cycle
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Powell, Sara K, MacAlpine, Heather K, Prinz, Joseph A, Li, Yulong, Belsky, Jason A, and MacAlpine, David M
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- 2015
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23. Wayside teaching: Building autonomy: Educators must ensure that students are autonomous, not anonymous
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Powell, Sara Davis
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- 2011
24. Wayside Teaching: Focusing on Relationships
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Powell, Sara Davis
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- 2011
25. Teachers' Days, Delights, and Dilemmas: Wayside Teaching
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Powell, Sara Davis
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- 2011
26. Identification of Functional Elements and Regulatory Circuits by Drosophila modENCODE
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The modeENCODE Consortium, Roy, Sushmita, Ernst, Jason, Kharchenko, Peter V., Kheradpour, Pouya, Negre, Nicolas, Eaton, Matthew L., Landolin, Jane M., Bristow, Christopher A., Ma, Lijia, Lin, Michael F., Washietl, Stefan, Arshinoff, Bradley I., Ay, Ferhat, Meyer, Patrick E., Robine, Nicolas, Washington, Nicole L., Di Stefano, Luisa, Berezikov, Eugene, Brown, Christopher D., Candeias, Rogerio, Carlson, Joseph W., Carr, Adrian, Jungreis, Irwin, Marbach, Daniel, Sealfon, Rachel, Tolstorukov, Michael Y., Will, Sebastian, Alekseyenko, Artyom A., Artieri, Carlo, Booth, Benjamin W., Brooks, Angela N., Dai, Qi, Davis, Carrie A., Duff, Michael O., Feng, Xin, Gorchakov, Andrey A., Gu, Tingting, Henikoff, Jorja G., Kapranov, Philipp, Li, Renhua, MacAlpine, Heather K., Malone, John, Minoda, Aki, Nordman, Jared, Okamura, Katsutomo, Perry, Marc, Powell, Sara K., Riddle, Nicole C., Sakai, Akiko, Samsonova, Anastasia, Sandler, Jeremy E., Schwartz, Yuri B., Sher, Noa, Spokony, Rebecca, Sturgill, David, van Baren, Marijke, Wan, Kenneth H., Yang, Li, Yu, Charles, Feingold, Elise, Good, Peter, Guyer, Mark, Lowdon, Rebecca, Ahmad, Kami, Andrews, Justen, Berger, Bonnie, Brenner, Steven E., Brent, Michael R., Cherbas, Lucy, Elgin, Sarah C. R., Gingeras, Thomas R., Grossman, Robert, Hoskins, Roger A., Kaufman, Thomas C., Kent, William, Kuroda, Mitzi I., Orr-Weaver, Terry, Perrimon, Norbert, Pirrotta, Vincenzo, Posakony, James W., Ren, Bing, Russell, Steven, Cherbas, Peter, Graveley, Brenton R., Lewis, Suzanna, Micklem, Gos, Oliver, Brian, Park, Peter J., Celniker, Susan E., Henikoff, Steven, Karpen, Gary H., Lai, Eric C., MacAlpine, David M., Stein, Lincoln D., White, Kevin P., and Kellis, Manolis
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- 2010
27. PAX3 expression in primary melanomas and nevi
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Plummer, Rebecca S, Shea, Christopher R, Nelson, Maria, Powell, Sara K, Freeman, Diane M, Dan, Colleen P, and Lang, Deborah
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- 2008
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28. She Can and She Did: Chasing the FKT on the Backbone Trail.
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Powell, Sara M., Fasczewski, Kimberly S., Fravel, John D., and Gibson, Hugh M.
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ULTRAMARATHON running ,COGNITIVE ability ,SELF-efficacy ,SOCIAL support ,PHYSICAL activity - Abstract
Ultramarathon running consists of race distances beyond the traditional marathon with hundreds of events worldwide. Previous literature has examined motivation, mood, and cognitive processes of ultramarathon runners. However, little is known about the influence of self-efficacy and intrinsic motivation on resilience in this population. This study explored the psychological processes of a female ultramarathon runner completing a Fastest Known Time (FKT) on the 136.8-mile Backbone Trail in Santa Monica, California. Data collection included photo journaling, social media posts, event video footage, and a post-event semi-structured interview. Themes that emerged from these data included physical preparation, mental preparation, resilience, and social support. The runner utilized psychological skills including goal setting and self-talk. This case study revealed impactful insight regarding the psychological processes of a female ultramarathon runner completing the FKT on this trail. These findings present practical implications for professionals in sport and exercise psychology and coaches working with ultra-runners. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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29. "Step Outside the Box and Go to a New Place": Outdoor Education Experiences of Learners from Multiple Age Groups.
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Powell, Sara M., Gibson, Hugh M., and McCallister, Sarah G.
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EXPERIENTIAL learning ,OUTDOOR education ,AGE groups ,INTRINSIC motivation ,OUTDOOR recreation ,NATIONAL parks & reserves - Abstract
Outdoor education programs use experiential learning to positively impact intrinsic motivation and knowledge acquisition of program participants. However, few programs have done so with multi-age group populations. The purpose of this study was to examine the impact of an outdoor education experiential learning program on participant self-perceptions and intrinsic motivation for learning. Fourteen adults completed a six-day outdoor experiential learning course at Yellowstone National Park in May 2019. The experiences of these individuals were documented through focus group interviews, researcher observations, and photographs taken by both the researchers and participants. Four themes emerged from all sources of data, including respect, spiritualism, sense of connection, and learning. Overall, participants indicated this program positively impacted their levels of intrinsic motivation and increased knowledge of the outdoor world. The findings of this research support the combination of outdoor education and experiential learning programs in novel environments in the field of outdoor recreation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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30. DNA copy number evolution in Drosophila cell lines
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Lee, Hangnoh, McManus, C Joel, Cho, Dong-Yeon, Eaton, Matthew, Renda, Fioranna, Somma, Maria Patrizia, Cherbas, Lucy, May, Gemma, Powell, Sara, Zhang, Dayu, Zhan, Lijun, Resch, Alissa, Andrews, Justen, Celniker, Susan E, Cherbas, Peter, Przytycka, Teresa M, Gatti, Maurizio, Oliver, Brian, Graveley, Brenton, and MacAlpine, David
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- 2014
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31. Review
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Powell, Sara
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- 2017
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32. Identification of Functional Elements and Regulatory Circuits by Drosophila modENCODE
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Roy, Sushmita, Ernst, Jason, Kharchenko, Peter V., Kheradpour, Pouya, Negre, Nicolas, Eaton, Matthew L., Landolin, Jane M., Bristow, Christopher A., Ma, Lijia, Lin, Michael F., Washietl, Stefan, Arshinoff, Bradley I., Ay, Ferhat, Meyer, Patrick E., Robine, Nicolas, Washington, Nicole L., Stefano, Luisa Di, Berezikov, Eugene, Brown, Christopher D., Candeias, Rogerio, Carlson, Joseph W., Carr, Adrian, Jungreis, Irwin, Marbach, Daniel, Sealfon, Rachel, Tolstorukov, Michael Y., Will, Sebastian, Alekseyenko, Artyom A., Artieri, Carlo, Booth, Benjamin W., Brooks, Angela N., Dai, Qi, Davis, Carrie A., Duff, Michael O., Feng, Xin, Gorchakov, Andrey A., Gu, Tingting, Henikoff, Jorja G., Kapranov, Philipp, Li, Renhua, MacAlpine, Heather K., Malone, John, Minoda, Aki, Nordman, Jared, Okamura, Katsutomo, Perry, Marc, Powell, Sara K., Riddle, Nicole C., Sakai, Akiko, Samsonova, Anastasia, Sandler, Jeremy E., Schwartz, Yuri B., Sher, Noa, Spokony, Rebecca, Sturgill, David, van Baren, Marijke, Wan, Kenneth H., Yang, Li, Yu, Charles, Feingold, Elise, Good, Peter, Guyer, Mark, Lowdon, Rebecca, Ahmad, Kami, Andrews, Justen, Berger, Bonnie, Brenner, Steven E., Brent, Michael R., Cherbas, Lucy, Elgin, Sarah C. R., Gingeras, Thomas R., Grossman, Robert, Hoskins, Roger A., Kaufman, Thomas C., Kent, William, Kuroda, Mitzi I., Orr-Weaver, Terry, Perrimon, Norbert, Pirrotta, Vincenzo, Posakony, James W., Ren, Bing, Russell, Steven, Cherbas, Peter, Graveley, Brenton R., Lewis, Suzanna, Micklem, Gos, Oliver, Brian, Park, Peter J., Celniker, Susan E., Henikoff, Steven, Karpen, Gary H., Lai, Eric C., MacAlpine, David M., Stein, Lincoln D., White, Kevin P., and Kellis, Manolis
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- 2010
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33. PAX6 is expressed in pancreatic adenocarcinoma and is downregulated during induction of terminal differentiation
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Lang, Deborah, Mascarenhas, Joseph B., Powell, Sara K., Halegoua, Jason, Nelson, Maria, and Ruggeri, Bruce A.
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- 2008
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34. Ukraine was Born Free and is Everywhere in Chains: Zakon bozhyi and Enlightenment.
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Powell, Sara Jo
- Subjects
- *
ENLIGHTENMENT , *ROMANTICISM , *BROTHERLINESS , *PHILOSOPHY of religion - Abstract
This article examines the intellectual foundations of the Zakon bozhyi, an allegorical poem produced by the Brotherhood of Saints Cyril and Methodius in the mid-nineteenth century. The work is most often understood as a product of Romanticism. This article argues that it is rather a product of synergistic Enlightenment and Romantic thought. It focuses on the depiction of religion in the Zakon and demonstrates that depiction's origin in the Enlightenment. The article argues that work demonstrates a societal view of religion. Further, it demonstrates that the ecumenical stance of the Zakon is founded in the necessity for national and international stability, rather than in personal conviction. It emphasizes the importance of culturally specific forms of the Enlightenment, and shows how the Zakon is a product of a particularly East Slavic presentation of the movement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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- View/download PDF
35. Exploring Beliefs and Preferences for Reducing Sedentary Behavior Among Adults With Symptomatic Knee Osteoarthritis or Knee Replacement.
- Author
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Powell, Sara M., Larsen, Chelsea A., Phillips, Siobhan M., and Pellegrini, Christine A.
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PHYSICAL activity ,OSTEOARTHRITIS ,SEDENTARY behavior ,TOTAL knee replacement ,KNEE pain - Abstract
Objective: Physical activity has numerous benefits for those with symptomatic knee osteoarthritis (KOA) or knee replacement, yet many individuals engage in insufficient activity. The purpose of this study was to explore beliefs about sedentary behavior, barriers to standing, and program preferences for adults with symptomatic KOA or knee replacement. Methods: Forty‐two individuals ≥50 years with symptomatic KOA or knee replacement completed an online survey assessing current knee pain and function, sitting time, physical activity participation, beliefs about sedentary behavior, and preferences for a sedentary reduction program. Results: Participants indicated barriers to standing were pain, discomfort, or working on a computer. Most participants shared interest to participate in a program to reduce sitting time. Participants chose education, self‐monitoring, and activity tracking as most preferable components for an intervention design. Conclusion: Future interventions to reduce sedentary time may utilize these results to tailor programs for those with symptomatic KOA or knee replacement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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36. COVID-19 transforms art therapy services in the Arabian Gulf.
- Author
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Carlier, Natalia Gomez, Powell, Sara, El-Halawani, Mariam, Dixon, Michelle, and Weber, Alan
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ART therapy ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,CHANGE ,HEALTH attitudes ,HEALTH facility administration ,HEALTH services accessibility ,INTERNET ,MEDICAL ethics ,MEDICAL office management ,MEDICAL practice ,PRIVACY ,SOCIAL stigma ,TELEMEDICINE ,TRANSCULTURAL medical care ,CULTURAL competence ,OCCUPATIONAL adaptation ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
Art therapy in the Arabian Gulf is still nascent. This article discusses the impact of COVID-19 and the development of art therapy in the region and identifies both the challenges and advantages that this global pandemic brought to a small group of art therapists practicing in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Qatar. Our approach is rooted in relational cultural theory (RCT). For art therapists in a private practice in Dubai, the pandemic provided an opportunity to widen services and accessibility. In a hospital setting in Qatar, new regulations during the pandemic required adaptations that possibly contributed to stress and anxiety for the art therapist, patients, and health workers. Unexpected perceived changes included: highlighted stigma, increased openness, increased engagement, and change in perception of the art therapy service. For these art therapists, practicing in the Arabian Gulf, the global pandemic increased awareness of cultural competence and led to the development of online art therapy services. There is a dearth of art therapy research in the region. Future research on cultural competence and the efficacy of telehealth are recommended to develop a robust evidence base for the practice of art therapy in the Arabian Gulf. Art therapy is relatively new in the Arabian Gulf, with most art therapists completing their training in the West. During the global pandemic and the changes caused by COVID-19, art therapists had the opportunity to address critical issues in their practice. This article presents two different views from two culturally similar Middle Eastern countries into what happened during the global pandemic of 2020. The first view describes how the pandemic brought about the development of online art therapy within a private practice in Dubai, UAE. The second view describes multiple adaptations to the delivery of art therapy within a hospital setting in Qatar. In the private practice, developing online art therapy became an opportunity to increase access for people residing outside of Dubai, in other emirates, and beyond. Art therapists also noticed how online art therapy may impact privacy, as clients could complete their sessions from their own homes, and stigma concerning mental health. At the hospital setting in Qatar, COVID-19 brought a new way of working focused on safety. The art therapist in Qatar discusses how these changes impacted her work and some of the perceived unexpected gains that resulted, such as more collaboration with other professionals, more engagement from the patients, and a new openness around mental health as the families could communicate about a shared concern: COVID-19. In both cases, the pandemic brought development and opportunities for growth. The article's focus is to highlight the cultural differences of working in this region and to acknowledge the need for future research. Because the field is relatively new in the region, there is limited research; the art therapists have to rely on increased cultural awareness to adapt their practice to be helpful to service users. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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37. Go with the FLOW: Implementation of a psychological skills intervention in an exercise program for post-bariatric surgery patients.
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Powell, Sara M, Fasczewski, Kimberley S, Gill, Diane L, and Davis, Paul G
- Subjects
- *
ABILITY , *ADAPTABILITY (Personality) , *BEHAVIOR modification , *BODY image , *CONFIDENCE , *EXERCISE , *HEALTH , *HEALTH behavior , *INTERVIEWING , *RESEARCH methodology , *BARIATRIC surgery , *OVERWEIGHT persons , *TRAINING , *SOCIAL learning theory , *LIFESTYLES , *HUMAN services programs , *PHYSICAL activity - Abstract
Bariatric surgery is an effective obesity treatment; however, most individuals regain weight following surgery. Following a Lifestyle of Wellness (FLOW) is a psychological skills intervention with strategies designed to increase self-efficacy and promote living a healthy lifestyle including regular physical activity. Eleven participants completed FLOW. Results indicated participants enjoyed the program and intended to continue this lifestyle upon program completion. Interviews indicated FLOW was effective for improving self-perceptions, and exercise motivation. The most effective sessions were goal setting, future planning, and stress management. Suggestions for program improvement were provided. This information can be used to improve the FLOW program and for implementation into other settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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38. Adeno-Associated Virus Capsid-Promoter Interactions in the Brain Translate from Rat to the Nonhuman Primate.
- Author
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Bohlen, Martin O., McCown, Thomas J., Powell, Sara K., El-Nahal, Hala G., Daw, Tierney, Basso, Michele A., Sommer, Marc A., and Samulski, R. Jude
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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39. Brief Report: An Art Therapy Pilot Dyadic (parent/caregiver and child) Telehealth for Children Living with Autism Spectrum Disorder.
- Author
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Gómez-Carlier, Natalia and Powell, Sara
- Subjects
- *
ART therapy , *AUTISTIC children , *CHILDREN with autism spectrum disorders , *EXPRESSIVE arts therapy , *CAREGIVERS , *MENTAL illness , *MEDICAL personnel , *SERVICES for caregivers - Abstract
Due to COVID-19 safety protocols, the vulnerable within our community had limited access to resources. Children of determination have encountered disruption to therapeutic services especially from March 2020 to November 2020. The pilot attempted to address question(s) of feasibility in maintaining services, preventing mental health and deterioration of symptoms and behaviour, and in increasing access to resources for children with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD). The research looked to question, if online services could substitute in-person services with this population, and to determine plausibility of online group art therapy services for children and their caregivers. The impact of COVID-19 on mental health is still unclear; early published reports indicate the onset of moderate to severe depressive symptoms, anxiety, and stress, potentially having a prolonged psychological impact on some individuals (Qiu et al., 2020). Overall, there is a lack of literature on art therapy in the region, and more so for online intervention, specifically in support of ASD during the pandemic. ASD is a neurodevelopmental disorder that impairs a person's ability to communicate, socialize, and respond to certain stimuli within environments. Parents, pediatricians, and nurseries typically identify concerns that prompt diagnosis, ideally by age 3; prevalence is higher in males than females (Elsabbagh et al., 2012). ASD is recognized by delayed language development, repetitive and stereotyped patterns of behavior, impacting imagination, and difficulty with social interaction (Rapin & Dunn, 1997). Overall, the Middle East has had relatively little published research on ASD etiology, although statistics indicate that ASD affects 1 in 146 births in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) (Virolainen, 2020). Genetic linkage such as kinship and multiparity is culturally and regionally common. Epidemiological research into autism in the UAE is relatively new. The prevalence of autism likely remains underdetermined as many cases of autism potentially go undiagnosed within the community due to stigma and lack of awareness; mild cases can be unnoticed, and delayed diagnoses might result from a lack of focus or training in the area of early intervention (Salhia et al., 2014). It is, therefore, crucial that there is a continuation of support without disruption. Art Therapy is an integrative mental health profession that engages participants with the creative process, active art-making, and integrated psychological theory within the context of a therapeutic relationship (American Art Therapy Association, 2020). Art psychotherapists have a minimum of a master's degree in art psychotherapy with clinical practice and supervised experience before gaining professional registration, a rigorous process. Children with autism are generally referred to art therapy specifically in the West (Martin, 2009; Teeuw, 2011) to support coping with communication challenges, behaviour, and low self-esteem (Schweizer et al., 2014; Schweizer et al., 2017). Research demonstrates that children with autism are expected to benefit from a non-verbal treatment such as art therapy, through sensory exploration, looking at, and shaping art materials to facilitate expression (Malchiodi, 2003; Rubin, 2001; Schweizer et al., 2009). This pilot study explores if conducting art therapy online would be beneficial and fill the gap when in-person services are not possible. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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40. Art Therapy Service Provision during the COVID-19 Pandemic in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC).
- Author
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Dixon, Michelle, Gómez-Carlier, Natalia, Powell, Sara, El-Halawani, Mariam, and Weber, Alan S.
- Subjects
ART therapy ,EXPRESSIVE arts therapy ,MENTAL health services ,RELATIONAL-cultural therapy ,TELEMEDICINE ,COVID-19 pandemic ,VIRTUAL communities - Abstract
Objective: To report novel developments in standard art therapy practices in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Qatar that arose during the COVID-19 pandemic circa 2020-22. Background: Art therapy services are a new phenomenon in the Middle East, with current practitioners having received their training primarily in the UK, US, and Australia. Religious therapies, such as prayers, rituals, talismans (against the evil eye) and Quranic recitation continue to be common approaches to mental illness in the Arabian Gulf. The visual arts have experienced a renaissance in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) region, with billions of U.S. dollars of government funds invested in art education, galleries, exhibitions, and museums (Louvre Abu Dhabi, Museum of Islamic Art, etc.). Qatar has a national strategy to become an art and cultural hub in the Middle East. Methodology: Self-reflective exercises, process art, and specialist discussions among 5 experts in the field currently practicing in the Gulf were conducted in 2020 to document and analyze new methodologies and perspectives implemented during COVID-19 lockdowns, primarily in the area of telehealth and telemedicine. A related study by the authors in 2020, "Best Practices in Art Therapy Telehealth Communication: Perspectives from the Middle East," provided additional analytical data. Qualitative data was organized into themes using standard Grounded Theory techniques. The practitioners framed their therapeutic work within the model of Relational Cultural Theory (RCT). Results and Discussion: The thematic findings were grouped under the headings: "Stigma," "Empowerment," "Confidentiality," "Therapeutic Relations," and "Art/Nonverbal Communication." The pandemic allowed practitioners to expand services geographically outside of the Gulf beyond traditional face-face meetings through the Zoom.com videoconferencing platform. Online sessions provided unexpected benefits in the areas of increased privacy and reduction of social stigma. Since telehealth laws in the Gulf are almost non-existent, practitioners collaborated with international partners to develop best practices and ethical guidelines adapted to the local cultural context. Results of the analysis revealed shifts in previously established boundaries and power dynamics (clients and therapists can turn video and microphone off, see each other's house, pets and other family members). The presence of family members at home sometimes impacted the privacy of the client, but in some situations allowed opportunities to meet extended family members, providing additional diagnostic clues into family dynamics. A reduced ability to communicate and understand nonverbal cues and body language (eye contact was different, lack of seeing the body) was cited as a drawback to virtual clinical encounters. The expert / novice skill level disparity of the therapist / client was diminished when co-creating digital artwork (ex. use of the Zoom whiteboard). The limitations on art materials that could be obtained during shop closures for some clients increased creativity and innovation in artmaking, but for others it decreased artmaking opportunities. Conclusion: All aspects of art therapy in the Arabian Gulf, and especially online services provision, are under-researched. Areas for further inquiry include: cultural adaptation of western models of care, local perceptions of the origins and treatment of mental health disorders, and awareness and acceptance of expressive arts psychotherapeutic interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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41. RIFFING ON GATSBY.
- Author
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Powell, Sara
- Published
- 2017
42. 1253: EFFECT OF PERIPHERALLY INFUSED NOREPINEPHRINE ON REDUCING CENTRAL VENOUS CATHETER UTILIZATION.
- Author
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Powell, Sara, Faust, Andrew, and George, Stephy
- Subjects
- *
CENTRAL venous catheters , *NORADRENALINE , *PERIPHERALLY inserted central catheters - Abstract
B Results: b Ninety-eight of 124 total patients initially received peripheral norepinephrine infusions, most of which required vasopressors for distributive or mixed shock. B Introduction: b Vasoactive agents like norepinephrine have been historically administered via central venous catheters (CVCs) due to the perceived risk of local tissue injury with peripheral infusion. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2023
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43. Desacetyl nimbinene inhibits breast cancer growth and metastasis through reactive oxygen species mediated mechanisms.
- Author
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Arumugam, Arunkumar, Subramani, Ramadevi, Nandy, Sushmita, Powell, Sara, Velazquez, Marissa, Orozco, Alexis, Galvez, Adriana, and Lakshmanaswamy, Rajkumar
- Abstract
Accumulation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) has been implicated in induction of apoptosis and regulation of key signaling molecules in cancer cells. Phytochemicals are potent source of anticancer drugs as wells as potential inducers of ROS. Neem ( Azadirachta indica) is a medicinal plant used for the treatment of various diseases. The main objective of this study is to investigate the anticancer effect of desacetyl nimbinene (DAN; an active ingredient of neem) against breast cancer. Normal and breast cancer cell lines were used for the study. The effect of DAN on cell proliferation, apoptosis, ROS generation, migration, and invasion was analyzed. Antioxidant enzymes superoxide dismutase (SOD)1 and SOD2 were overexpressed to test the effect of DAN-induced ROS generation on breast cancer growth. Key survival and apoptotic protein markers were analyzed to validate the anticancer effect of DAN. Our data demonstrated that DAN inhibited the growth of breast cancer cells by inducing ROS generation. Further investigations revealed that DAN treatment lead to the loss of mitochondrial membrane potential resulting in mitochondria-dependent apoptotic cell death. Increased phosphorylation of c-Jun-N-terminal kinase (JNK) and reduced phosphorylation of p38 were also observed in response to DAN treatment. Inhibition of ROS production by overexpressing antioxidant enzymes SOD1 and SOD2 reduced the DAN-induced cytotoxicity. Additionally, DAN significantly inhibited migration and invasion of MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells. Overall, our data suggest that DAN exerts its anticancer effect on breast cancer by induction of mitochondria-mediated apoptosis mediated by ROS accumulation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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44. Altimetry using gnss reflectrometry for L5.
- Author
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Powell, Sara J., Akos, Dennis M., and Backen, Staffan
- Abstract
GNSS reflectrometry offers a low cost alternative for Earth remote sensing and is used to measure, for example, ocean altimetry, wind speed, wind direction and modeling of the ocean surface state. A bistatic configuration, using one right-handed circular polarized and one left-handed circular polarized antenna, was built for this experiment in order to measure direct and reflected L1 and L5 signals. The direct and reflected signals were compared and the path difference between them calculated, leading to altitude measurements with both L1 and L5 signals. Compared to publicly available signals on L1, the higher code rate of L5 will provide higher measurement sensitivity. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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45. Examination of cardiac rehabilitation participants referred to a musculoskeletal clinic.
- Author
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Khan, Mohammed, Neuhof, Aliza, Tsai, Sarina, Powell, Sara, Silaj, Ellen, MacNeill, Heather, Oh, Paul, and Cott, Cheryl
- Published
- 2014
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46. DNA copy number evolution in Drosophila cell lines.
- Author
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Hangnoh Lee, McManus, C. Joel, Dong-Yeon Cho, Eaton, Matthew, Renda, Fioranna, Somma, Maria Patrizia, Cherbas, Lucy, May, Gemma, Powell, Sara, Dayu Zhang, Lijun Zhan, Resch, Alissa, Andrews, Justen, Celniker, Susan E., Cherbas, Peter, Przytycka, Teresa M., Gatti, Maurizio, Oliver, Brian, Graveley, Brenton, and MacAlpine, David
- Published
- 2014
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47. Expression in Aneuploid Drosophila S2 Cells.
- Author
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Yu Zhang, Malone, John H., Powell, Sara K., Periwal, Vipul, Spana, Eric, MacAlpine, David M., and Oliver, Brian
- Subjects
GENE expression ,DROSOPHILA ,ANEUPLOIDY ,NUCLEOTIDE sequence ,X chromosome ,GENOMICS - Abstract
Extensive departures from balanced gene dose in aneuploids are highly deleterious. However, we know very little about the relationship between gene copy number and expression in aneuploid cells. We determined copy number and transcript abundance (expression) genome-wide in Drosophila S2 cells by DNA-Seq and RNA-Seq. We found that S2 cells are aneuploid for .43 Mb of the genome, primarily in the range of one to five copies, and show a male genotype (∼ two X chromosomes and four sets of autosomes, or 2X;4A). Both X chromosomes and autosomes showed expression dosage compensation. X chromosome expression was elevated in a fixed-fold manner regardless of actual gene dose. In engineering terms, the system ''anticipates'' the perturbation caused by X dose, rather than responding to an error caused by the perturbation. This feed-forward regulation resulted in precise dosage compensation only when X dose was half of the autosome dose. Insufficient compensation occurred at lower X chromosome dose and excessive expression occurred at higher doses. RNAi knockdown of the Male Specific Lethal complex abolished feed-forward regulation. Both autosome and X chromosome genes show Male Specific Lethal-independent compensation that fits a first order dose-response curve. Our data indicate that expression dosage compensation dampens the effect of altered DNA copy number genome-wide. For the X chromosome, compensation includes fixed and dose-dependent components. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. "It's Okay to Not Be Okay": Mental Health Concerns and New Directions as a Result of the COVID-19 Pandemic.
- Author
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Hauff, Caitlyn and Powell, Sara M.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Creating Silence on the Campus.
- Author
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Hopkins-Powell, Sara
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Use of Physical Activity Monitors in Rheumatic Populations.
- Author
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Pellegrini, Christine A., Powell, Sara M., Mook, Nicholas, DeVivo, Katherine, and Ehrlich-Jones, Linda
- Abstract
Purpose of Review: The purpose of this review paper is to provide an overview of the recent research using physical activity monitors in rheumatic populations including those with osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, systemic lupus erythematosus, and fibromyalgia.Recent Findings: Recent research demonstrates increased use of physical activity monitors in these populations, especially in those with osteoarthritis. Results from cross-sectional, longitudinal, and intervention studies highlight that physical activity levels are below recommended guidelines, yet evidence suggests benefits such as improving pain, fatigue, function, and overall well-being.Summary: While the use of physical activity monitors in rheumatic populations is increasing, more research is needed to better understand physical activity levels in these populations, the effects of activity on relevant clinical outcomes, and how monitors can be used to help more individuals reach physical activity guidelines. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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