97 results on '"Lazarus RS"'
Search Results
2. Targeting risk factors for inhibited preschool children: An anxiety prevention program.
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Doyle FL, Dodd HF, Morris TM, Lazarus RS, Byrow Y, and Hudson JL
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- Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Mothers, Risk Factors, Temperament, Anxiety prevention & control, Anxiety Disorders prevention & control
- Abstract
Objective: Children with a behaviorally inhibited temperament during early childhood have been shown to have an increased risk for developing anxiety disorders. This study evaluated the efficacy of an anxiety prevention program aimed at reducing the risk of anxiety in behaviorally inhibited preschool children., Method: Participants were 86 children aged 41-57 months and their mothers. Children were selected if their mothers reported high levels of child behavioral inhibition on a screening measure. Participants were randomly allocated to a nine-session intervention or a waitlist control condition. Mothers and children both participated in the intervention., Results: At follow-up, the intervention group had significantly fewer clinician-rated child anxiety disorders and fewer mother-reported child anxiety symptoms than at baseline but this change was not significantly different to the change seen in the waitlist control group., Conclusions: On average, across the course of the study, anxiety decreased in all children irrespective of group. A number of potential reasons for this are discussed along with implications for research and clinical practice., (Copyright © 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
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3. Brodifacoum Toxicity in American Kestrels (Falco sparverius) with Evidence of Increased Hazard on Subsequent Anticoagulant Rodenticide Exposure.
- Author
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Rattner BA, Volker SF, Lankton JS, Bean TG, Lazarus RS, and Horak KE
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- 4-Hydroxycoumarins analysis, Animals, Anticoagulants analysis, Female, Indans toxicity, Kidney chemistry, Kidney drug effects, Liver chemistry, Liver drug effects, Prothrombin Time, Risk Assessment, Rodenticides analysis, 4-Hydroxycoumarins toxicity, Anticoagulants toxicity, Ecotoxicology methods, Falconiformes blood, Rodenticides toxicity
- Abstract
A seminal question in ecotoxicology is the extent to which contaminant exposure evokes prolonged effects on physiological function and fitness. A series of studies were undertaken with American kestrels ingesting environmentally realistic concentrations of the second-generation anticoagulant rodenticide (SGAR) brodifacoum. Kestrels fed brodifacoum at 0.3, 1.0, or 3.0 µg/g diet wet weight for 7 d exhibited dose-dependent hemorrhage, histopathological lesions, and coagulopathy (prolonged prothrombin and Russell's viper venom times). Following termination of a 7-d exposure to 0.5 µg brodifacoum/g diet, prolonged blood clotting time returned to baseline values within 1 wk, but brodifacoum residues in liver and kidney persisted during the 28-d recovery period (terminal half-life estimates >50 d). To examine the hazard of sequential anticoagulant rodenticide (AR) exposure, kestrels were exposed to either the first-generation AR chlorophacinone (1.5 µg/g diet) or the SGAR brodifacoum (0.5 µg/g diet) for 7 d and, following a recovery period, challenged with a low dose of chlorophacinone (0.75 µg/g diet) for 7 d. In brodifacoum-exposed kestrels, the challenge exposure clearly prolonged prothrombin time compared to naive controls and kestrels previously exposed to chlorophacinone. These data provide evidence that the SGAR brodifacoum may have prolonged effects that increase the toxicity of subsequent AR exposure. Because free-ranging predatory and scavenging wildlife are often repeatedly exposed to ARs, such protracted toxicological effects need to be considered in hazard and risk assessments. Environ Toxicol Chem 2020;39:468-481. © 2020 SETAC., (© 2019 SETAC.)
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- 2020
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4. Examination of contaminant exposure and reproduction of ospreys (Pandion haliaetus) nesting in Delaware Bay and River in 2015.
- Author
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Rattner BA, Lazarus RS, Bean TG, McGowan PC, Callahan CR, Erickson RA, and Hale RC
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- Animals, Bays, Delaware, Polychlorinated Biphenyls metabolism, Reproduction, Rivers, Environmental Monitoring, Falconiformes metabolism, Water Pollutants, Chemical metabolism
- Abstract
A study of ospreys (Pandion haliaetus) nesting in the coastal Inland Bays of Delaware, and the Delaware Bay and Delaware River in 2015 examined spatial and temporal trends in contaminant exposure, food web transfer and reproduction. Concentrations of organochlorine pesticides and metabolites, polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), coplanar PCB toxic equivalents, polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) and other flame retardants in sample eggs were generally greatest in the Delaware River. Concentrations of legacy contaminants in 2015 Delaware Bay eggs were lower than values observed in the 1970s through early 2000s. Several alternative brominated flame retardants were rarely detected, with only TBPH [bis(2-ethylhexyl)-tetrabromophthalate)] present in 5 of 27 samples at <5 ng/g wet weight. No relation was found between p,p'-DDE, total PCBs or total PBDEs in eggs with egg hatching, eggs lost from nests, nestling loss, fledging and nest success. Osprey eggshell thickness recovered to pre-DDT era values, and productivity was adequate to sustain a stable population. Prey fish contaminant concentrations were generally less than those in osprey eggs, with detection frequencies and concentrations greatest in white perch (Morone americana) from Delaware River compared to the Bay. Biomagnification factors from fish to eggs for p,p'-DDE and total PCBs were generally similar to findings from several Chesapeake Bay tributaries. Overall, findings suggest that there have been improvements in Delaware Estuary waterbird habitat compared to the second half of the 20th century. This trend is in part associated with mitigation of some anthropogenic contaminant threats., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2018
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5. The Structure of Challenging Parenting Behavior and Associations With Anxiety in Dutch and Australian Children.
- Author
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Majdandžić M, Lazarus RS, Oort FJ, van der Sluis C, Dodd HF, Morris TM, de Vente W, Byrow Y, Hudson JL, and Bögels SM
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- Australia, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Male, Surveys and Questionnaires, Sweden, Anxiety psychology, Parenting psychology
- Abstract
Challenging parenting behavior (CPB), a novel construct involving active physical and verbal behaviors that encourage children to push their limits, has been identified as a potential buffer against child anxiety. This study aimed to (a) evaluate the measurement invariance of the Challenging Parenting Behavior Questionnaire (CPBQ4-6) across Dutch and Australian mothers and fathers of preschoolers, (b) examine differences in levels of CPB across mothers and fathers and across countries, and (c) examine whether parents' CPB predicts less child anxiety symptoms and disorders. Participants were 312 families-146 Dutch and 166 Australian-with their 3- to 4-year-old child (55.8% girls). Fathers' and mothers' CPB was measured using the CPBQ4-6, and child anxiety symptoms and presence of anxiety disorders were assessed using maternal reports. Multigroup confirmatory factor analyses revealed equivalence of factor structure and factor loadings (all significant) of the CPBQ4-6 across mothers and fathers and across countries. Evidence of partial scalar invariance indicated that the groups differed on some subscales of the CPBQ4-6. Australian mothers scored lower on the CPB factor than Australian fathers and Dutch parents. Structural equation models showed that CPB predicted fewer child anxiety symptoms and anxiety disorders for all groups. The study confirms that the CPBQ4-6 is appropriate for use with Dutch and Australian parents of preschool-age children and identifies CPB as a multifaceted and coherent construct. The negative relations between CPB and child anxiety suggest that CPB has a protective role in childhood anxiety and is important to examine in future research and interventions.
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- 2018
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6. Pharmaceuticals in water, fish and osprey nestlings in Delaware River and Bay.
- Author
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Bean TG, Rattner BA, Lazarus RS, Day DD, Burket SR, Brooks BW, Haddad SP, and Bowerman WW
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- Animals, Bays, Delaware, Fishes metabolism, Food Chain, Pharmaceutical Preparations metabolism, Rivers chemistry, Water Pollutants, Chemical metabolism, Environmental Monitoring, Falconiformes metabolism, Pharmaceutical Preparations analysis, Water Pollutants, Chemical analysis
- Abstract
Exposure of wildlife to Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients (APIs) is likely to occur but studies of risk are limited. One exposure pathway that has received attention is trophic transfer of APIs in a water-fish-osprey food chain. Samples of water, fish plasma and osprey plasma were collected from Delaware River and Bay, and analyzed for 21 APIs. Only 2 of 21 analytes exceeded method detection limits in osprey plasma (acetaminophen and diclofenac) with plasma levels typically 2-3 orders of magnitude below human therapeutic concentrations (HTC). We built upon a screening level model used to predict osprey exposure to APIs in Chesapeake Bay and evaluated whether exposure levels could have been predicted in Delaware Bay had we just measured concentrations in water or fish. Use of surface water and BCFs did not predict API concentrations in fish well, likely due to fish movement patterns, and partitioning and bioaccumulation uncertainties associated with these ionizable chemicals. Input of highest measured API concentration in fish plasma combined with pharmacokinetic data accurately predicted that diclofenac and acetaminophen would be the APIs most likely detected in osprey plasma. For the majority of APIs modeled, levels were not predicted to exceed 1 ng/mL or method detection limits in osprey plasma. Based on the target analytes examined, there is little evidence that APIs represent a significant risk to ospreys nesting in Delaware Bay. If an API is present in fish orders of magnitude below HTC, sampling of fish-eating birds is unlikely to be necessary. However, several human pharmaceuticals accumulated in fish plasma within a recommended safety factor for HTC. It is now important to expand the scope of diet-based API exposure modeling to include alternative exposure pathways (e.g., uptake from landfills, dumps and wastewater treatment plants) and geographic locations (developing countries) where API contamination of the environment may represent greater risk., (Published by Elsevier Ltd.)
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- 2018
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7. Chesapeake Bay fish-osprey (Pandion haliaetus) food chain: Evaluation of contaminant exposure and genetic damage.
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Lazarus RS, Rattner BA, McGowan PC, Hale RC, Karouna-Renier NK, Erickson RA, and Ottinger MA
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- Animals, Bays, Environmental Monitoring, Falconiformes growth & development, Fishes metabolism, Flame Retardants metabolism, Flame Retardants toxicity, Halogenated Diphenyl Ethers metabolism, Halogenated Diphenyl Ethers toxicity, Ovum drug effects, Ovum metabolism, Polychlorinated Biphenyls metabolism, Polychlorinated Biphenyls toxicity, Reproduction drug effects, Water Pollutants, Chemical metabolism, DNA Damage drug effects, Falconiformes metabolism, Food Chain, Water Pollutants, Chemical toxicity
- Abstract
From 2011 to 2013, a large-scale ecotoxicological study was conducted in several Chesapeake Bay (USA) tributaries (Susquehanna River and flats, the Back, Baltimore Harbor/Patapsco Rivers, Anacostia/ middle Potomac, Elizabeth and James Rivers) and Poplar Island as a mid-Bay reference site. Osprey (Pandion haliaetus) diet and the transfer of contaminants from fish to osprey eggs were evaluated. The most bioaccumulative compounds (biomagnification factor > 5) included p,p'-dichlorodiphenyldichloroethylene (DDE), total polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), total polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs), and bromodiphenyl ether (BDE) congeners 47, 99, 100, and 154. This analysis suggested that alternative brominated flame retardants and other compounds (methoxytriclosan) are not appreciably biomagnifying. A multivariate analysis of similarity indicated that major differences in patterns among study sites were driven by PCB congeners 105, 128, 156, 170/190, and 189, and PBDE congeners 99 and 209. An integrative redundancy analysis showed that osprey eggs from Baltimore Harbor/Patapsco River and the Elizabeth River had high residues of PCBs and p,p'-DDE, with PBDEs making a substantial contribution to overall halogenated contamination on the Susquehanna and Anacostia/middle Potomac Rivers. The redundancy analysis also suggested a potential relation between PBDE residues in osprey eggs and oxidative DNA damage in nestling blood samples. The results also indicate that there is no longer a discernible relation between halogenated contaminants in osprey eggs and their reproductive success in Chesapeake Bay. Osprey populations are thriving in much of the Chesapeake, with productivity rates exceeding those required to sustain a stable population. Environ Toxicol Chem 2016;35:1560-1575. Published 2016 Wiley Periodicals Inc. on behalf of SETAC. This article is a US Government work and, as such, is in the public domain in the United States of America., (Published 2016 Wiley Periodicals Inc. on behalf of SETAC. This article is a US Government work and, as such, is in the public domain in the United States of America.)
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- 2016
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8. The relationship between challenging parenting behaviour and childhood anxiety disorders.
- Author
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Lazarus RS, Dodd HF, Majdandžić M, de Vente W, Morris T, Byrow Y, Bögels SM, and Hudson JL
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- Adult, Child, Preschool, Fathers statistics & numerical data, Female, Humans, Interview, Psychological, Male, Middle Aged, Mothers statistics & numerical data, Surveys and Questionnaires, Young Adult, Anxiety Disorders diagnosis, Fathers psychology, Mothers psychology, Parenting psychology
- Abstract
Background: This research investigates the relationship between challenging parenting behaviour and childhood anxiety disorders proposed by Bögels and Phares (2008). Challenging parenting behaviour involves the playful encouragement of children to go beyond their own limits, and may decrease children's risk for anxiety (Bögels and Phares, 2008)., Method: Parents (n=164 mothers and 144 fathers) of 164 children aged between 3.4 and 4.8 years participated in the current study. A multi-method, multi-informant assessment of anxiety was used, incorporating data from diagnostic interviews as well as questionnaire measures. Parents completed self-report measures of their parenting behaviour (n=147 mothers and 138 fathers) and anxiety (n=154 mothers and 143 fathers). Mothers reported on their child's anxiety via questionnaire as well as diagnostic interview (n=156 and 164 respectively). Of these children, 74 met criteria for an anxiety disorder and 90 did not., Results: Fathers engaged in challenging parenting behaviour more often than mothers. Both mothers' and fathers' challenging parenting behaviour was associated with lower report of child anxiety symptoms. However, only mothers' challenging parenting behaviour was found to predict child clinical anxiety diagnosis., Limitations: Shared method variance from mothers confined the interpretation of these results. Moreover, due to study design, it is not possible to delineate cause and effect., Conclusions: The finding with respect to maternal challenging parenting behaviour was not anticipated, prompting replication of these results. Future research should investigate the role of challenging parenting behaviour by both caregivers as this may have implications for parenting interventions for anxious children., (Crown Copyright © 2015. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
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9. Decadal re-evaluation of contaminant exposure and productivity of ospreys (Pandion haliaetus) nesting in Chesapeake Bay Regions of Concern.
- Author
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Lazarus RS, Rattner BA, McGowan PC, Hale RC, Schultz SL, Karouna-Renier NK, and Ottinger MA
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- Animals, Bays, District of Columbia, Environmental Monitoring, Environmental Pollutants blood, Environmental Pollutants metabolism, Food Chain, Maryland, Ovum chemistry, Time Factors, Virginia, Environmental Exposure, Environmental Pollutants toxicity, Falconiformes physiology, Reproduction drug effects
- Abstract
The last large-scale ecotoxicological study of ospreys (Pandion haliaetus) in Chesapeake Bay was conducted in 2000-2001 and focused on U.S. EPA-designated Regions of Concern (ROCs; Baltimore Harbor/Patapsco, Anacostia/middle Potomac, and Elizabeth Rivers). In 2011-2012, ROCs were re-evaluated to determine spatial and temporal trends in productivity and contaminants. Concentrations of p,p'-DDE were low in eggs and below the threshold associated with eggshell thinning. Eggs from the Anacostia/middle Potomac Rivers had lower total PCB concentrations in 2011 than in 2000; however, concentrations remained unchanged in Baltimore Harbor. Polybrominated diphenyl ether flame retardants declined by 40%, and five alternative brominated flame retardants were detected at low levels. Osprey productivity was adequate to sustain local populations, and there was no relation between productivity and halogenated contaminants. Our findings document continued recovery of the osprey population, declining levels of many persistent halogenated compounds, and modest evidence of genetic damage in nestlings from industrialized regions., (Published by Elsevier Ltd.)
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- 2015
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10. Anxiety and Attentional Bias in Preschool-Aged Children: An Eyetracking Study.
- Author
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Dodd HF, Hudson JL, Williams T, Morris T, Lazarus RS, and Byrow Y
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- Child, Preschool, Eye Movement Measurements, Female, Humans, Male, Anxiety Disorders physiopathology, Attention physiology, Facial Expression, Fear physiology
- Abstract
Extensive research has examined attentional bias for threat in anxious adults and school-aged children but it is unclear when this anxiety-related bias is first established. This study uses eyetracking technology to assess attentional bias in a sample of 83 children aged 3 or 4 years. Of these, 37 (19 female) met criteria for an anxiety disorder and 46 (30 female) did not. Gaze was recorded during a free-viewing task with angry-neutral face pairs presented for 1250 ms. There was no indication of between-group differences in threat bias, with both anxious and non-anxious groups showing vigilance for angry faces as well as longer dwell times to angry over neutral faces. Importantly, however, the anxious participants spent significantly less time looking at the faces overall, when compared to the non-anxious group. The results suggest that both anxious and non-anxious preschool-aged children preferentially attend to threat but that anxious children may be more avoidant of faces than non-anxious children.
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- 2015
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11. Interactive effects of climate change with nutrients, mercury, and freshwater acidification on key taxa in the North Atlantic Landscape Conservation Cooperative region.
- Author
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Pinkney AE, Driscoll CT, Evers DC, Hooper MJ, Horan J, Jones JW, Lazarus RS, Marshall HG, Milliken A, Rattner BA, Schmerfeld J, and Sparling DW
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- Animals, Aquatic Organisms classification, Aquatic Organisms growth & development, Atlantic Ocean, Biodiversity, Ecosystem, Environmental Monitoring, Eutrophication, Fresh Water chemistry, Mercury analysis, Climate Change, Conservation of Natural Resources, Water Pollution statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
The North Atlantic Landscape Conservation Cooperative LCC (NA LCC) is a public-private partnership that provides information to support conservation decisions that may be affected by global climate change (GCC) and other threats. The NA LCC region extends from southeast Virginia to the Canadian Maritime Provinces. Within this region, the US National Climate Assessment documented increases in air temperature, total precipitation, frequency of heavy precipitation events, and rising sea level, and predicted more drastic changes. Here, we synthesize literature on the effects of GCC interacting with selected contaminant, nutrient, and environmental processes to adversely affect natural resources within this region. Using a case study approach, we focused on 3 stressors with sufficient NA LCC region-specific information for an informed discussion. We describe GCC interactions with a contaminant (Hg) and 2 complex environmental phenomena-freshwater acidification and eutrophication. We also prepared taxa case studies on GCC- and GCC-contaminant/nutrient/process effects on amphibians and freshwater mussels. Several avian species of high conservation concern have blood Hg concentrations that have been associated with reduced nesting success. Freshwater acidification has adversely affected terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems in the Adirondacks and other areas of the region that are slowly recovering due to decreased emissions of N and sulfur oxides. Eutrophication in many estuaries within the region is projected to increase from greater storm runoff and less denitrification in riparian wetlands. Estuarine hypoxia may be exacerbated by increased stratification. Elevated water temperature favors algal species that produce harmful algal blooms (HABs). In several of the region's estuaries, HABs have been associated with bird die-offs. In the NA LCC region, amphibian populations appear to be declining. Some species may be adversely affected by GCC through higher temperatures and more frequent droughts. GCC may affect freshwater mussel populations via altered stream temperatures and increased sediment loading during heavy storms. Freshwater mussels are sensitive to un-ionized ammonia that more toxic at higher temperatures. We recommend studying the interactive effects of GCC on generation and bioavailability of methylmercury and how GCC-driven shifts in bird species distributions will affect avian exposure to methylmercury. Research is needed on how decreases in acid deposition concurrent with GCC will alter the structure and function of sensitive watersheds and surface waters. Studies are needed to determine how GCC will affect HABs and avian disease, and how more severe and extensive hypoxia will affect fish and shellfish populations. Regarding amphibians, we suggest research on 1) thermal tolerance and moisture requirements of species of concern, 2) effects of multiple stressors (temperature, desiccation, contaminants, nutrients), and 3) approaches to mitigate impacts of increased temperature and seasonal drought. We recommend studies to assess which mussel species and populations are vulnerable and which are resilient to rising stream temperatures, hydrological shifts, and ionic pollutants, all of which are influenced by GCC., (© 2015 SETAC.)
- Published
- 2015
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12. Investigating endocrine and physiological parameters of captive American kestrels exposed by diet to selected organophosphate flame retardants.
- Author
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Fernie KJ, Palace V, Peters LE, Basu N, Letcher RJ, Karouna-Renier NK, Schultz SL, Lazarus RS, and Rattner BA
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- Animals, Endocrine System drug effects, Falconiformes blood, Male, Thyroid Hormones blood, United States, Diet, Endocrine System metabolism, Environmental Exposure analysis, Falconiformes physiology, Flame Retardants toxicity, Organophosphorus Compounds toxicity
- Abstract
Organophosphate triesters are high production volume additive flame retardants (OPFRs) and plasticizers. Shown to accumulate in abiotic and biotic environmental compartments, little is known about the risks they pose. Captive adult male American kestrels (Falco sparverius) were fed the same dose (22 ng OPFR/g kestrel/d) daily (21 d) of tris(2-butoxyethyl) phosphate (TBOEP), tris(2-chloroethyl) phosphate (TCEP), tris(2-chloroisopropyl) phosphate (TCIPP), or tris(1,2-dichloro-2-propyl) phosphate (TDCIPP). Concentrations were undetected in tissues (renal, hepatic), suggesting rapid metabolism. There were no changes in glutathione status, indicators of hepatic oxidative status, or the cholinergic system (i.e., cerebrum, plasma cholinesterases; cerebrum muscarinic, nicotinic receptors). Modest changes occurred in hepatocyte integrity and function (clinical chemistry). Significant effects on plasma free triiodothyronine (FT3) concentrations occurred with exposure to TBOEP, TCEP, TCIPP, and TDCIPP; TBOEP and TCEP had additional overall effects on free thyroxine (FT4), whereas TDCIPP also influenced total thyroxine (TT4). Relative increases (32%-96%) in circulating FT3, TT3, FT4, and/or TT4 were variable with each OPFR at 7 d exposure, but limited thereafter, which was likely maintained through decreased thyroid gland activity and increased hepatic deiodinase activity. The observed physiological and endocrine effects occurred at environmentally relevant concentrations and suggest parent OPFRs or metabolites may have been present despite rapid degradation.
- Published
- 2015
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13. Toxicity reference values for chlorophacinone and their application for assessing anticoagulant rodenticide risk to raptors.
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Rattner BA, Horak KE, Lazarus RS, Schultz SL, Knowles S, Abbo BG, and Volker SF
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- Animals, Liver drug effects, Male, Reference Values, Risk, Risk Assessment, Anticoagulants toxicity, Blood Coagulation drug effects, Falconiformes metabolism, Indans toxicity, Rodenticides toxicity
- Abstract
Despite widespread use and benefit, there are growing concerns regarding hazards of second-generation anticoagulant rodenticides to non-target wildlife which may result in expanded use of first-generation compounds, including chlorophacinone (CPN). The toxicity of CPN over a 7-day exposure period was investigated in American kestrels (Falco sparverius) fed either rat tissue mechanically-amended with CPN, tissue from rats fed Rozol(®) bait (biologically-incorporated CPN), or control diets (tissue from untreated rats or commercial bird of prey diet) ad libitum. Nominal CPN concentrations in the formulated diets were 0.15, 0.75 and 1.5 µg/g food wet weight, and measured concentrations averaged 94 % of target values. Kestrel food consumption was similar among groups and body weight varied by less than 6 %. Overt signs of intoxication, liver CPN residues, and changes in prothrombin time (PT), Russell's viper venom time (RVVT) and hematocrit, were generally dose-dependent. Histological evidence of hemorrhage was present at all CPN dose levels, and most frequently observed in pectoral muscle and heart. There were no apparent differences in toxicity between mechanically-amended and biologically-incorporated CPN diet formulations. Dietary-based toxicity reference values at which clotting times were prolonged in 50 % of the kestrels were 79.2 µg CPN consumed/kg body weight-day for PT and 39.1 µg/kg body weight-day for RVVT. Based upon daily food consumption of kestrels and previously reported CPN concentrations found in small mammals following field baiting trials, these toxicity reference values might be exceeded by free-ranging raptors consuming such exposed prey. Tissue-based toxicity reference values for coagulopathy in 50 % of exposed birds were 0.107 µg CPN/g liver wet weight for PT and 0.076 µg/g liver for RVVT, and are below the range of residue levels reported in raptor mortality incidents attributed to CPN exposure. Sublethal responses associated with exposure to environmentally realistic concentrations of CPN could compromise survival of free-ranging raptors, and should be considered in weighing the costs and benefits of anticoagulant rodenticide use in pest control and eradication programs.
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- 2015
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14. Exposure and food web transfer of pharmaceuticals in ospreys (Pandion haliaetus): Predictive model and empirical data.
- Author
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Lazarus RS, Rattner BA, Brooks BW, Du B, McGowan PC, Blazer VS, and Ottinger MA
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- Animals, Animals, Newborn, District of Columbia, Environmental Monitoring, Falconiformes blood, Female, Fishes blood, Food Chain, Maryland, Pharmaceutical Preparations analysis, Rivers, Sweetening Agents analysis, Virginia, Water Pollutants, Chemical analysis, Water Pollutants, Chemical blood, Falconiformes metabolism, Fishes metabolism, Models, Biological, Pharmaceutical Preparations metabolism, Sweetening Agents metabolism, Water Pollutants, Chemical metabolism
- Abstract
The osprey (Pandion haliaetus) is a well-known sentinel of environmental contamination, yet no studies have traced pharmaceuticals through the water-fish-osprey food web. A screening-level exposure assessment was used to evaluate the bioaccumulation potential of 113 pharmaceuticals and metabolites, and an artificial sweetener in this food web. Hypothetical concentrations in water reflecting "wastewater effluent dominated" or "dilution dominated" scenarios were combined with pH-specific bioconcentration factors (BCFs) to predict uptake in fish. Residues in fish and osprey food intake rate were used to calculate the daily intake (DI) of compounds by an adult female osprey. Fourteen pharmaceuticals and a drug metabolite with a BCF greater than 100 and a DI greater than 20 µg/kg were identified as being most likely to exceed the adult human therapeutic dose (HTD). These 15 compounds were also evaluated in a 40 day cumulative dose exposure scenario using first-order kinetics to account for uptake and elimination. Assuming comparable absorption to humans, the half-lives (t1/2 ) for an adult osprey to reach the HTD within 40 days were calculated. For 3 of these pharmaceuticals, the estimated t1/2 in ospreys was less than that for humans, and thus an osprey might theoretically reach or exceed the HTD in 3 to 7 days. To complement the exposure model, 24 compounds were quantified in water, fish plasma, and osprey nestling plasma from 7 potentially impaired locations in Chesapeake Bay. Of the 18 analytes detected in water, 8 were found in fish plasma, but only 1 in osprey plasma (the antihypertensive diltiazem). Compared to diltiazem detection rate and concentrations in water (10/12 detects,
- Published
- 2015
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15. Toxicokinetics and coagulopathy threshold of the rodenticide diphacinone in eastern screech-owls (Megascops asio).
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Rattner BA, Horak KE, Lazarus RS, Goldade DA, and Johnston JJ
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- Anemia chemically induced, Animals, Anticoagulants pharmacokinetics, Blood Coagulation drug effects, Female, Kidney metabolism, Liver metabolism, Male, Phenindione pharmacokinetics, Phenindione toxicity, Prothrombin Time, Rodenticides pharmacokinetics, Strigiformes, United States, Anticoagulants toxicity, Phenindione analogs & derivatives, Rodenticides toxicity
- Abstract
In the United States, new regulations on second-generation anticoagulant rodenticides will likely be offset by expanded use of first-generation anticoagulant rodenticides. In the present study, eastern screech-owls (Megascops asio) were fed 10 µg diphacinone/g wet weight food for 7 d, and recovery was monitored over a 21-d postexposure period. By day 3 of exposure, diphacinone (DPN) was detected in liver (1.63 µg/g wet wt) and kidney (5.83 µg/g) and coagulopathy was apparent. By day 7, prothrombin time (PT) and Russell's viper venom time (RVVT) were prolonged, and some individuals were anemic. Upon termination of exposure, coagulopathy and anemia were resolved within 4 d, and residues decreased to <0.3 µg/g by day 7. Liver and kidney DPN elimination occurred in 2 phases (initial rapid loss, followed by slower loss rate), with overall half-lives of 11.7 d and 2.1 d, respectively. Prolonged PT and RVVT occurred in 10% of the exposed owls with liver DPN concentrations of 0.122 µg/g and 0.282 µg/g and in 90% of the owls with liver concentrations of 0.638 µg/g and 0.361 µg/g. These liver residue levels associated with coagulopathy fall in the range of values reported in raptor mortality incidents involving DPN. These tissue-based toxicity reference values for coagulopathy in adult screech-owls have application for interpreting nontarget mortality and assessing the hazard of DPN in rodent-control operations. Diphacinone exposure evokes toxicity in raptors within a matter of days; but once exposure is terminated, recovery of hemostasis occurs rapidly., (© 2013 SETAC. This article is a US Government work and is in the public domain in the USA.)
- Published
- 2014
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16. Adverse outcome pathway and risks of anticoagulant rodenticides to predatory wildlife.
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Rattner BA, Lazarus RS, Elliott JE, Shore RF, and van den Brink N
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- Animals, Europe, Food Chain, North America, Risk Assessment, Anticoagulants toxicity, Rodenticides toxicity
- Abstract
Despite a long history of successful use, routine application of some anticoagulant rodenticides (ARs) may be at a crossroad due to new regulatory guidelines intended to mitigate risk. An adverse outcome pathway for ARs was developed to identify information gaps and end points to assess the effectiveness of regulations. This framework describes chemical properties of ARs, established macromolecular interactions by inhibition of vitamin K epoxide reductase, cellular responses including altered clotting factor processing and coagulopathy, organ level effects such as hemorrhage, organism responses with linkages to reduced fitness and mortality, and potential consequences to predator populations. Risk assessments have led to restrictions affecting use of some second-generation ARs (SGARs) in North America. While the European regulatory community highlighted significant or unacceptable risk of ARs to nontarget wildlife, use of SGARs in most EU member states remains authorized due to public health concerns and the absence of safe alternatives. For purposes of conservation and restoration of island habitats, SGARs remain a mainstay for eradication of invasive species. There are significant data gaps related to exposure pathways, comparative species sensitivity, consequences of sublethal effects, potential hazards of greater AR residues in genetically resistant prey, effects of low-level exposure to multiple rodenticides, and quantitative data on the magnitude of nontarget wildlife mortality.
- Published
- 2014
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17. Comparative embryotoxicity of a pentabrominated diphenyl ether mixture to common terns (Sterna hirundo) and American kestrels (Falco sparverius).
- Author
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Rattner BA, Lazarus RS, Heinz GH, Karouna-Renier NK, Schultz SL, and Hale RC
- Subjects
- Animals, Bone and Bones drug effects, Bone and Bones embryology, Charadriiformes genetics, Charadriiformes growth & development, Charadriiformes metabolism, DNA Damage, Falconiformes genetics, Falconiformes growth & development, Falconiformes metabolism, Organ Size drug effects, Oviposition drug effects, Ovum drug effects, Ovum physiology, Oxidative Stress drug effects, Species Specificity, Charadriiformes embryology, Falconiformes embryology, Polybrominated Biphenyls toxicity, Teratogens toxicity
- Abstract
Concentrations of polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) in Forster's tern (Sterna forsteri) eggs from San Francisco Bay have been reported to range up to 63μgg(-1) lipid weight. This value exceeds the lowest-observed-adverse-effect level (1.8μgg(-1) egg wet weight; ∼32μg(-1) lipid weight) reported in an embryotoxicity study with American kestrels (Falco sparverius). As a surrogate for Forster's terns, common tern (Sterna hirundo) eggs were treated by air cell injection with corn oil vehicle (control) or a commercial penta-BDE formulation (DE-71) at nominal concentrations of 0.2, 2, and 20μgg(-1) egg. As a positive control, kestrel eggs received vehicle or 20μg DE-71g(-1) egg. In terns, there were no effects of DE-71 on embryonic survival, and pipping or hatching success; however, treated eggs hatched later (0.44d) than controls. Organ weights, organ-to-body weight ratios, and bone lengths did not differ, and histopathological observations were unremarkable. Several measures of hepatic oxidative stress in hatchling terns were not affected by DE-71, although there was some evidence of oxidative DNA damage (8-hydroxy-deoxyguanosine; 8-OH-dG). Although DE-71 did not impair pipping and hatching of kestrels, it did result in a delay in hatch, shorter humerus length, and reduced total thyroid weight. Concentrations of oxidized glutathione, reduced glutathione, thiobarbituric acid reactive substances, and 8-OH-dG in liver were greater in DE-71-treated kestrels compared to controls. Our findings suggest common tern embryos, and perhaps other tern species, are less sensitive to PBDEs than kestrel embryos., (Published by Elsevier Ltd.)
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Assessment of toxicity and potential risk of the anticoagulant rodenticide diphacinone using Eastern screech-owls (Megascops asio).
- Author
-
Rattner BA, Horak KE, Lazarus RS, Eisenreich KM, Meteyer CU, Volker SF, Campton CM, Eisemann JD, and Johnston JJ
- Subjects
- Administration, Oral, Animals, Anticoagulants pharmacokinetics, Chemical and Drug Induced Liver Injury etiology, Chemical and Drug Induced Liver Injury metabolism, Chemical and Drug Induced Liver Injury pathology, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Female, Hemorrhage chemically induced, Liver drug effects, Liver metabolism, Liver pathology, Longevity drug effects, Male, Phenindione pharmacokinetics, Phenindione toxicity, Rodenticides pharmacokinetics, Species Specificity, Toxicity Tests, Whole Blood Coagulation Time, Anticoagulants toxicity, Phenindione analogs & derivatives, Rodenticides toxicity, Strigiformes physiology
- Abstract
In the United States, new regulatory restrictions have been placed on the use of some second-generation anticoagulant rodenticides. This action may be offset by expanded use of first-generation compounds (e.g., diphacinone; DPN). Single-day acute oral exposure of adult Eastern screech-owls (Megascops asio) to DPN evoked overt signs of intoxication, coagulopathy, histopathological lesions (e.g., hemorrhage, hepatocellular vacuolation), and/or lethality at doses as low as 130 mg/kg body weight, although there was no dose-response relation. However, this single-day exposure protocol does not mimic the multiple-day field exposures required to cause mortality in rodent pest species and non-target birds and mammals. In 7-day feeding trials, similar toxic effects were observed in owls fed diets containing 2.15, 9.55 or 22.6 ppm DPN, but at a small fraction (<5%) of the acute oral dose. In the dietary trial, the average lowest-observed-adverse-effect-level for prolonged clotting time was 1.68 mg DPN/kg owl/week (0.24 mg/kg owl/day; 0.049 mg/owl/day) and the lowest lethal dose was 5.75 mg DPN/kg owl/week (0.82 mg/kg owl/day). In this feeding trial, DPN concentration in liver ranged from 0.473 to 2.21 μg/g wet weight, and was directly related to the daily and cumulative dose consumed by each owl. A probabilistic risk assessment indicated that daily exposure to as little as 3-5 g of liver from DPN-poisoned rodents for 7 days could result in prolonged clotting time in the endangered Hawaiian short-eared owl (Asio flammeus sandwichensis) and Hawaiian hawk (Buteo solitarius), and daily exposure to greater quantities (9-13 g of liver) could result in low-level mortality. These findings can assist natural resource managers in weighing the costs and benefits of anticoagulant rodenticide use in pest control and eradication programs.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Emotions and interpersonal relationships: toward a person-centered conceptualization of emotions and coping.
- Author
-
Lazarus RS
- Subjects
- Adaptation, Psychological, Anecdotes as Topic, Anger, Defense Mechanisms, Helping Behavior, Humans, Personality, Social Environment, Social Perception, Stress, Psychological psychology, Altruism, Emotions, Individuality, Interpersonal Relations, Problem Solving
- Abstract
This essay describes my theory of emotions. I make a case for studying discrete emotions in the context of four processes that represent the central features of my theoretical system: appraising, coping, flow of actions and reactions, and relational meaning. I explain why coping is a key feature of the emotion process, and I discuss issues related to the measurement of coping and the importance of understanding coping processes in the context of personality and situational demands. I make the argument that emotions are best studied as narratives, and I offer one such narrative in the form of a case study to demonstrate how emotions can best be understood in the context of an interpersonal relationship and by considering individual differences, interpersonal transactions, and relational meaning. I conclude this essay with a caution that field specialization may interfere with our understanding of emotions and other psychological phenomena, and I underscore the virtues of ipsative-normative research designs as a way to move closer to a person-centered personality psychology.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Toward better research on stress and coping.
- Author
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Lazarus RS
- Subjects
- Defense Mechanisms, Emotions, Humans, Interprofessional Relations, Longitudinal Studies, Research Design, Stress, Psychological
- Abstract
In commenting in considerable detail on the four main articles in the special section on stress and coping, the author comes to two main conclusions: First, there is an increasing amount of high quality research on stress and coping that suggests the field is finally maturing, and this research may help reduce the long-standing gap between research and clinical practice. Second, this research is increasingly using badly needed research designs that have not hitherto been sufficiently emphasized, such as longitudinal or prospective designs, focused on observations that are day-to-day, microanalytic, and in-depth, and that are compatible with a holistic outlook. The author also addresses the role of positive emotion in coping, the concept of defense as it is dealt with nowadays, and the task of evaluating coping efficacy.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Hurrah for a systems approach.
- Author
-
Lazarus RS
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. In search of the "hot" cognitions: attributions, appraisals, and their relation to emotion.
- Author
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Smith CA, Haynes KN, Lazarus RS, and Pope LK
- Subjects
- Anger, Anxiety psychology, Fear, Female, Guilt, Happiness, Humans, Male, Motivation, Cognition, Emotions, Models, Psychological
- Abstract
Two studies examined the hypothesized status of appraisals, relative to attributions, as proximal antecedents of emotion. In Study 1, which looked at 6 emotions (happiness, hope-challenge, anger, guilt, fear-anxiety, and sadness), undergraduates (N = 136) reported on their attributions, appraisals, and emotions during past encounters associated with a variety of situations. In Study 2, which was focused on anger and guilt, undergraduates (N = 120) reported on these same variables in response to experimenter-supplied vignettes that systematically manipulated theoretically relevant attributions. The results of both studies indicated that the emotions were more directly related to appraisals than they were to attributions, and Study 2 provided evidence that appraisal serves as a mediator between attribution and emotional response. These findings lend support to the hypothesized status of appraisal as the most proximal cognitive antecedent of emotion.
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Coping theory and research: past, present, and future.
- Author
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Lazarus RS
- Subjects
- Female, Forecasting, Humans, Male, Models, Psychological, Psychometrics, Research trends, Terminology as Topic, Adaptation, Psychological, Life Change Events, Stress, Psychological psychology
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. From psychological stress to the emotions: a history of changing outlooks.
- Author
-
Lazarus RS
- Subjects
- Adaptation, Psychological, Female, Humans, Individuality, Life Change Events, Male, Models, Psychological, Emotions, Psychological Theory, Stress, Psychological psychology
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Coping with the stress of illness.
- Author
-
Lazarus RS
- Subjects
- Health Status, Humans, Internal-External Control, Mental Health, Models, Psychological, Problem Solving, Sick Role, Social Support, Stress, Psychological psychology, Adaptation, Psychological, Chronic Disease psychology, Stress, Psychological prevention & control
- Abstract
How can we cope better, or help others to do so? The answer to this depends on knowing what an individual is coping with. This, in turn, depends on the appraisal, by the individual concerned, of the significance of what is happening for well-being--in effect, the source of harm, threat, challenge. Cases of myocardial infarction, cancer and chronic pain have some harms, threats, and challenges in common but there are also unique factors in each illness. The patient with a chronic illness is continually appraising his or her symptoms, pains, disease progression with respect to their significance for well-being and survival, and coping accordingly. The paper presents a microanalytic, contextual and process-centred approach to coping which is part of a broad system of thought, emphasizing cognitive appraisal and the person's ongoing relationships with the environment as factors of his or her emotional life. Implications for prevention and treatment of illness in a perspective of health promotion are discussed as well as the need for research to predict long-term outcome from stress and coping.
- Published
- 1992
26. Progress on a cognitive-motivational-relational theory of emotion.
- Author
-
Lazarus RS
- Subjects
- Humans, Cognition, Emotions, Interpersonal Relations, Motivation, Psychological Theory
- Abstract
The 2 main tasks of this article are 1st, to examine what a theory of emotion must do and basic issues that it must address. These include definitional issues, whether or not physiological activity should be a defining attribute, categorical versus dimensional strategies, the reconciliation of biological universals with sociocultural sources of variability, and a classification of the emotions. The 2nd main task is to apply an analysis of appraisal patterns and the core relational themes that they produce to a number of commonly identified emotions. Anger, anxiety, sadness, and pride (to include 1 positive emotion) are used as illustrations. The purpose is to show the capability of a cognitive-motivational-relational theory to explain and predict the emotions. The role of coping in emotion is also discussed, and the article ends with a response to criticisms of a phenomenological, folk-theory outlook.
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Cognition and motivation in emotion.
- Author
-
Lazarus RS
- Subjects
- Brain physiology, Humans, Personality Development, Psychophysiology, Unconscious, Psychology, Cognition physiology, Emotions physiology, Motivation
- Abstract
The role of cognition--and to some extent motivation--in emotion, the ways meaning is generated, unconscious appraising, and the implications of this way of thinking for life-span development are addressed. It is argued that appraisal is a necessary as well as sufficient cause of emotion and that knowledge is necessary but not sufficient. This position is examined in light of what is known about emotions in infants and young children, the effects of drugs on acute emotions and moods, and recent patterns of thought about the brain in emotions. The discussion of how meaning is generated is the core of the article. Automatic processing without awareness is contrasted with deliberate and conscious processing, and the concept of resonance between an animal's needs and what is encountered in the environment is examined. The idea that there is more than one way meaning is achieved strengthens and enriches the case for the role of appraisal in emotion and allows the consideration of what is meant by unconscious and preconscious appraisal and the examination of how they might work.
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. If it changes it must be a process: study of emotion and coping during three stages of a college examination.
- Author
-
Folkman S and Lazarus RS
- Subjects
- Cognition, Educational Measurement, Female, Humans, Individuality, Male, Models, Psychological, Social Support, Adaptation, Psychological, Emotions, Life Change Events, Stress, Psychological psychology
- Abstract
This natural experiment provides substantial evidence for the following major themes, which are based on a cognitively oriented, process-centered theory of stress and coping: First, a stressful encounter should be viewed as a dynamic, unfolding process, not as a static, unitary event. Emotion and coping (including the use of social support) were assessed at three stages of a midterm examination: the anticipation stage before the exam, the waiting stage after the exam and before grades were announced, and after grades were posted. For the group as a whole there were significant changes in emotions and coping (including the use of social support) across the three stages. Second, people experience seemingly contradictory emotions and states of mind during every stage of an encounter. In this study, for example, subjects experienced both threat emotions and challege emotions. The complexity of emotions and their cognitive appraisals reflects ambiguity regarding the multifaceted nature of the exam and its meanings, especially during the anticipation stage. Third, coping is a complex process. On the average, subjects used combinations of most of the available forms of problem-focused coping and emotion-focused coping at every stage of the exam. Different forms of coping were salient during the anticipation and waiting stages. Problem-focused coping and emphasizing the positive were more prominent during the former, and distancing more prominent during the latter. Finally, despite normatively shared emotional reactions at each stage, substantial individual differences remained. Using selected appraisal and coping variables, and taking grade point averages (GPA) into account, approximately 48% of the variances in threat and challenge emotions at the anticipation stage was explained. Controlling for variance due to the grade received, appraisal, and coping variables accounted for 28% of the variance in positive and negative emotions at the outcome stage. Including grade, 57% of the variance in positive emotions at outcome and 61% of the negative emotions at outcome were explained.
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Psychoactive drugs, alcohol, and stress and coping processes in older adults.
- Author
-
Huffine CL, Folkman S, and Lazarus RS
- Subjects
- Aged, Female, Humans, Male, Retirement, Adaptation, Psychological, Alcohol Drinking, Psychotropic Drugs administration & dosage, Stress, Psychological psychology
- Abstract
Data are presented on a) the relationship between psychoactive substance use and personal characteristics, b) the relationship between psychoactive substance use and appraisal of and coping with stressful situations, and c) the use of psychoactive substances specifically to cope with stress among older people. Data were provided by 141 65-to-74-year-old retired Caucasians who were assessed repeatedly over 6 months. Compared to national samples, subjects were relatively heavy users of alcohol and average users of psychoactive drugs. Use of alcohol increased with income, and drug use was associated with several psychosocial characteristics as well as with psychological and somatic health. Psychoactive substance use did not relate to the ways subjects appraised and coped with stressful encounters. Further, only a small number of subjects used drugs or alcohol specifically to help them cope in these encounters. The findings about psychoactive drug users are compared with other findings about misusers of drugs, and the risks associated with each type of drug use are discussed.
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. The health-related functions of social support.
- Author
-
Schaefer C, Coyne JC, and Lazarus RS
- Subjects
- Adaptation, Psychological, Depression psychology, Family, Female, Humans, Interpersonal Relations, Male, Middle Aged, Morale, Research Design standards, Social Behavior, Social Perception, Surveys and Questionnaires, Health, Health Status, Life Change Events, Social Environment
- Abstract
Social support research has been hampered by a lack of clarity both in the definitions of social support and in the conceptualization of its effects on health outcomes. The present study compared social network size and three types of perceived social support--tangible, emotional, and informational--in relation to stressful life events, psychological symptoms and morale, and physical health status in a sample of 100 persons 45-64 years old. Social network size was empirically separable from, though correlated with, perceived social support and had a weaker overall relationship to outcomes than did support. Low tangible support and emotional support, in addition to certain life events, were independently related to depression and negative morale; informational support was associated with positive morale. Neither social support nor stressful life events were associated with physical health. It was concluded that social support research would benefit from attention to the multidimensionality of support and greater specificity in hypotheses about the relationship between types of support and adaptational outcomes.
- Published
- 1981
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Comparison of two modes of stress measurement: daily hassles and uplifts versus major life events.
- Author
-
Kanner AD, Coyne JC, Schaefer C, and Lazarus RS
- Subjects
- Adaptation, Psychological, Affect, Emotions, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Quality of Life, Regression Analysis, Sex Factors, Stress, Psychological diagnosis, Affective Symptoms etiology, Life Change Events, Stress, Psychological complications
- Abstract
The standard life events methodology for the prediction of psychological symptoms was compared with one focusing on relatively minor events, namely, the hassles and uplifts of everyday life. Hassles and Uplifts Scales were constructed and administered once a month for 10 consecutive months to a community sample of middle-aged adults. It was found that the Hassles Scale was a better predictor of concurrent and subsequent psychological symptoms than were the life events scores, and that the scale shared most of the variance in symptoms accounted for by life events. When the effects of life events scores were removed, hassles and symptoms remained significantly correlated. Uplifts were positively related to symptoms for women but not for men. Hassles and uplifts were also shown to be related, although only modestly so, to positive and negative affect, thus providing discriminate validation for hassles and uplifts in comparison to measures of emotion. It was concluded that the assessment of daily hassles and uplifts may be a better approach to the prediction of adaptational outcomes than the usual life events approach.
- Published
- 1981
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Psychological stress and coping in adaptation and illness.
- Author
-
Lazarus RS
- Subjects
- 17-Hydroxycorticosteroids urine, Adrenal Medulla physiology, Alcohol Drinking, Attention, Denial, Psychological, Feedback, Humans, Hypnosis, Hypnotics and Sedatives therapeutic use, Hypothalamo-Hypophyseal System physiology, Personality, Psychophysiologic Disorders prevention & control, Psychophysiology, Relaxation, Tranquilizing Agents therapeutic use, Yoga, Adaptation, Psychological, Psychophysiologic Disorders etiology, Stress, Psychological
- Published
- 1974
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. The impact of daily stress on health and mood: psychological and social resources as mediators.
- Author
-
DeLongis A, Folkman S, and Lazarus RS
- Subjects
- Adult, Disease Susceptibility, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Psychological Tests, Risk Factors, Self Concept, Mood Disorders psychology, Psychophysiologic Disorders psychology, Social Environment, Social Support, Stress, Psychological complications
- Abstract
This study examined daily stress processes among 75 married couples across 20 assessments during a 6-month period. The somatic and psychological effects of common everyday hassles were investigated. Overall, there was a significant relationship between daily stress and the occurrence of both concurrent and subsequent health problems such as flu, sore throat, headaches, and backaches. The relationship of daily stress to mood disturbance was more complex. The negative effects of stress on mood were limited to a single day, with the following day characterized by mood scores that were better than usual. Furthermore, striking individual differences were found in the extent to which daily stress was associated with health and mood across time. Participants with unsupportive social relationships and low self-esteem were more likely to experience an increase in psychological and somatic problems both on and following stressful days than were participants high in self-esteem and social support. These data suggest that persons with low psychosocial resources are vulnerable to illness and mood disturbance when their stress levels increase, even if they generally have little stress in their lives.
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. A cognitively oriented psychologist looks at biofeedback.
- Author
-
Lazarus RS
- Subjects
- Adaptation, Psychological, Humans, Volition, Cognition, Emotions, Feedback
- Published
- 1975
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Centrality and individual differences in the meaning of daily hassles.
- Author
-
Gruen RJ, Folkman S, and Lazarus RS
- Subjects
- Adult, Disease Susceptibility, Ego, Environment, Female, Humans, Internal-External Control, Male, Mental Disorders etiology, Middle Aged, Stress, Psychological psychology, Disease etiology, Stress, Psychological complications
- Abstract
In this study we introduce the concept of centrality in an attempt to assess individual differences in the meaning underlying daily hassles. Central hassles are defined as those which reflect important ongoing themes or problems in the person's life. The characteristics of central hassles, and their role in psychological and somatic health, were assessed in a sample of 150 community-residing men and women. The results indicate that central hassles vary in content from person to person and touch more on problems with personal needs and deficits in coping skills compared to noncentral hassles. The dimension of centrality was found to play a significant role in the prediction of psychological symptoms. Although the empirical case for the importance of centrality in the stress-illness relationship is inconclusive due to problems of confounding and a cross-sectional rather than longitudinal design, the ideas presented appear promising and provide a basis for further research on psychological vulnerability to stress.
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Puzzles in the study of daily hassles.
- Author
-
Lazarus RS
- Subjects
- Adaptation, Psychological, Adjustment Disorders psychology, Humans, Life Change Events, Psychophysiologic Disorders psychology, Social Adjustment, Social Environment, Somatoform Disorders psychology, Life Style, Stress, Psychological complications
- Published
- 1984
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. The relationship between coping and emotion: implications for theory and research.
- Author
-
Folkman S and Lazarus RS
- Subjects
- Humans, Research, Adaptation, Psychological, Emotions
- Abstract
Historically, coping has been viewed as a response to emotion. Our purpose here is to evaluate this idea and offer a broader view based on cognitive and relational principles concerning the emotion process. We will explore the ways emotion and coping influence each other in what must ultimately be seen as a dynamic, mutually reciprocal relationship.
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Depression and coping in stressful episodes.
- Author
-
Coyne JC, Aldwin C, and Lazarus RS
- Subjects
- Humans, Middle Aged, Adaptation, Psychological, Depressive Disorder psychology, Stress, Psychological psychology
- Published
- 1981
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Psychological stress in the workplace.
- Author
-
Lazarus RS
- Subjects
- Cross-Cultural Comparison, Humans, Psychological Theory, Research Design, Work, Occupational Medicine, Stress, Psychological prevention & control, Stress, Psychological psychology
- Published
- 1989
40. [An analysis of coping in a middle-aged community sample].
- Author
-
Folkman S and Lazarus RS
- Subjects
- Humans, Adaptation, Psychological, Middle Aged psychology
- Published
- 1988
41. Coping as a mediator of emotion.
- Author
-
Folkman S and Lazarus RS
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Risk Factors, Adaptation, Psychological, Affective Symptoms psychology, Life Change Events
- Abstract
There is widespread conviction among health care professionals that coping affects emotion. Yet theory and research have traditionally emphasized the effects of emotion on coping. The present research addresses this imbalance by evaluating the extent to which coping mediated emotions during stressful encounters in two Caucasian, community-residing samples. Subjects' recently experienced stressful encounters, the ways they coped with the demands of those encounters, and the emotions they experienced during two stages of those encounters were assessed repeatedly. The extent to which eight forms of coping mediated each of four sets of emotions was evaluated with a series of hierarchical regression analyses (of residuals). Coping was associated with changes in all four sets of emotions, with some forms of coping associated with increases in positive emotions and other forms associated with increases in negative emotions.
- Published
- 1988
42. Correlates of social support receipt.
- Author
-
Dunkel-Schetter C, Folkman S, and Lazarus RS
- Subjects
- Adult, Defense Mechanisms, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Problem Solving, Adaptation, Psychological, Life Change Events, Social Environment, Social Support
- Abstract
Psychological correlates of social support receipt were examined in an investigation of stress and coping among 150 middle-aged community residents. Subjects were interviewed monthly for 6 months, each time concerning a specific stressful situation in the previous month. Social support received and methods of coping were assessed each time, as well as other variables. Factors hypothesized to be associated with support receipt were person predispositions, appraisal patterns with regard to specific stressful encounters, and coping strategies used. Each was most strongly associated with a particular type of social support. Person predispositions related most strongly to emotional support received, appraisal factors related most strongly to aid, and coping strategies related most to informational support received. Furthermore, of the three sets of variables, the individual's ways of coping appeared to be most strongly associated with all types of social support received. Two implications are explored. First, we suggest that the three types of social support studied represent different constructs with different antecedents and consequences. Second, we argue that coping behavior provides interpersonal cues regarding what is wanted or needed in a stressful situation and that the members of the social environment respond accordingly.
- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Psychological stress and coping in aging.
- Author
-
Lazarus RS and DeLongis A
- Subjects
- Aged, Humans, Life Change Events, Adaptation, Psychological, Aging, Stress, Psychological psychology
- Published
- 1983
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. A strategy for research on psychological and social factors in hypertension.
- Author
-
Lazarus RS
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Hypertension psychology, Male, Hypertension etiology, Research Design, Social Environment, Stress, Psychological complications
- Abstract
Stress-related research has thus far failed to provide an adequate understanding of hypertension and other psychosomatic ailments for three main reasons: First, there has been a continual failure to view stress as a relational phenomenon, that is, as a particular kind of transaction between person and environment. Second, there has been much confusion about the social, psychological and physiological levels of stress analysis; each is to some extent independent of the other, so that what happens at one level cannot stand for what happens at another. Third, the predominant research model has been structural and static. That is, the researcher looks at some environmental or personality characteristic, treating it as a stable property, and attempts to relate it to the risk of hypertension across persons or groups. Such an approach overlooks the key social, psychological and physiological mediating processes (e.g., social supports, cognitive appraisals, and coping) that are concurrent with and have causal significance in blood pressure elevation or change. Structural research models need to be supplemented with process-oriented ones in which the same persons are observed across various adaptational encounters and over time.
- Published
- 1978
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Stress processes and the misuse of drugs in older adults.
- Author
-
Folkman S, Bernstein L, and Lazarus RS
- Subjects
- Aged, Alcohol Drinking psychology, Drug Interactions, Female, Humans, Male, Problem Solving, San Francisco, Sick Role, Adaptation, Psychological, Psychotropic Drugs, Stress, Psychological complications, Substance-Related Disorders psychology
- Abstract
There is increasing concern about the misuse of drugs among the elderly. We assessed misuse, including drug usage, drug interactions across pharmacologic classes, and multiple drugs in the same pharmacologic class, in a community sample of 65 to 74-year-olds, and evaluated its relation to stress and coping processes and psychological and somatic health. Assessments were made repeatedly over a 6-month period. Results indicated that misuse was multidimensional and widespread. Misusers did not differ from nonmisusers on antecedent psychosocial variables, nor did they report more hassles or cope differently than nonmisusers. However, misusers and nonmisusers differed on their subjective experience of stressful encounters; misusers experienced their hassles as more intense, and they experienced more threat emotions and more dissatisfaction with their coping than did nonmisusers. Misuse was also associated with long-term psychological satisfaction, psychological symptoms, and somatic health.
- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. The role of activity in anticipating and confronting stressful situations.
- Author
-
Gal R and Lazarus RS
- Subjects
- 17-Hydroxycorticosteroids blood, Adaptation, Physiological, Autonomic Nervous System physiology, Defense Mechanisms, Humans, Hydrocortisone blood, Methoxyhydroxyphenylglycol blood, Motor Activity, Personality Assessment, Stress, Physiological blood, Adaptation, Psychological physiology, Stress, Psychological physiology
- Abstract
This paper is an analytical review of studies comparing stress reactions in threatening situations during which the person can or cannot take action. The studies reviewed were conducted mainly in real-life situations and involved diverse forms of coping activities under various conditions of danger and distress. To achieve a better understanding of the effect of activity on stress reactions, several distinctions are made: between various types of stress reactions; between various indices and measurements of stress reactions; between activity which is directly related to the source of threat and activity which is not; and between various personality dimensions. The adaptive potential of activity in stressful situations is discussed in terms of: the sense of mastery and control provided by activity; activity as a means of attention diversion; and activity as a means of discharging energy generated by mobilization. It is suggested that taking action under stressful conditions, as opposed to remaining passive, is a powerful coping tool.
- Published
- 1975
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Characterization of the use and misuse of medications by an elderly, ambulatory population.
- Author
-
Bernstein LR, Folkman S, and Lazarus RS
- Subjects
- Aged, Alcohol Drinking, Female, Humans, Male, Drug Utilization, Substance-Related Disorders
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Stress-processes and depressive symptomatology.
- Author
-
Folkman S and Lazarus RS
- Subjects
- Adaptation, Psychological, Adult, Emotions, Female, Hostility, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Depression psychology, Stress, Psychological psychology
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Appraisal, coping, health status, and psychological symptoms.
- Author
-
Folkman S, Lazarus RS, Gruen RJ, and DeLongis A
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Personality Tests, Psychometrics, Adaptation, Psychological, Adjustment Disorders psychology, Life Change Events, Somatoform Disorders psychology
- Abstract
In this study we examined the relation between personality factors (mastery and interpersonal trust), primary appraisal (the stakes a person has in a stressful encounter), secondary appraisal (options for coping), eight forms of problem- and emotion-focused coping, and somatic health status and psychological symptoms in a sample of 150 community-residing adults. Appraisal and coping processes should be characterized by a moderate degree of stability across stressful encounters for them to have an effect on somatic health status and psychological symptoms. These processes were assessed in five different stressful situations that subjects experienced in their day-to-day lives. Certain processes (e.g., secondary appraisal) were highly variable, whereas others (e.g., emotion-focused forms of coping) were moderately stable. We entered mastery and interpersonal trust, and primary appraisal and coping variables (aggregated over five occasions), into regression analyses of somatic health status and psychological symptoms. The variables did not explain a significant amount of the variance in somatic health status, but they did explain a significant amount of the variance in psychological symptoms. The pattern of relations indicated that certain variables were positively associated and others negatively associated with symptoms.
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. The psychology of stress and coping.
- Author
-
Lazarus RS
- Subjects
- Emotions, Humans, Israel, Warfare, Adaptation, Psychological, Stress, Psychological psychology
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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