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Religious Commitment Predicts Lower Incidence of Preterm Birth in Rural Appalachian WomenClements, Andrea D., Ermakova, Anna V. 01 February 2012 (has links)
No description available.
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532 |
Infant Birth Outcomes Among Substance Abusing Women: Why Quitting Smoking Is Just as Important as Quitting Harder DrugsBailey, Beth A., McCook, Judy G., Clements, Andrea D., McGrady, Lana 01 June 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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533 |
Prenatal Smoke Exposure and Language Outcomes at 15 Months: Social Aspects of Communication Versus Expressive and Receptive LanguageBailey, Beth A., Clements, Andrea D., Scott, Jessica, McGrady, Lana 01 April 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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534 |
Measuring Religiosity and Risk in a Prenatal Population: Attendance, Prayer, Influence or Surrender to Predict Developmental Risk?Clements, Andrea D., Ermakova, Anna V., Bailey, Beth A. 01 April 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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535 |
Prenatal Smoke Exposure and Language Outcomes at 15 Months: Social Aspects of Communication Versus Expressive and Receptive LanguageBailey, Beth A., Clements, Andrea D., Scott, J., McGrady, Lana 01 April 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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536 |
Religious Attendance Versus Religious Surrender as a Measure of Prenatal StressClements, Andrea D., Ermakova, Anna V. 01 April 2011 (has links)
Abstract available through the Annals of Behavioral Medicine.
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537 |
Looking Up: Surrender and Church Attendance Across Racial Groups in Southern AppalachiaCaldwell, JonDon, Clements, Andrea D. 24 March 2011 (has links)
There are differences in the importance of religiosity among racial groups. High spirituality and religiosity has been linked to lower amounts of depression, anxiety, and stress (Dailey 2007) and is, therefore an important variable to study. Surrender, a specific aspect of religiosity has been studied very little. A sample of undergraduate college students took the Surrender Scale (SS, Wong-McDonald & Gorsuch, 2000) and the BMMRS (Fetzer Institute, 1999). Surrendering to God may be found to predict health just as other forms of religiosity have. My interest in this study was to determine whether Surrender and church attendance vary among racial groups in Southern Appalachia as has been found in other geographic areas.
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538 |
Quitting Smoking During Pregnancy and Birth Outcomes: Evidence of Gains Following Cessation by Third TrimesterBailey, Beth A., McCook, Judy G., Hodge, A. L., Clements, Andrea D., McGrady, Lana 01 February 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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539 |
Screening for Religious Commitment: Prediction of Surrender to God From a Single-ItemClements, Andrea D., Ermakova, Anna V., Bailey, Beth A. 01 October 2010 (has links)
No description available.
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540 |
Prayer/Religiosity as Primary Stress Coping Strategy Predicts Health-Related Pregnancy and Birth Factors in a Rural Appalachian SampleClements, Andrea D., Bailey, Beth A., Wright, Heather, Ermakova, Anna V. 01 June 2010 (has links)
During intake, a rural sample of 1312 women admitted for low-risk singleton birth was asked the open-ended question, "How do you deal with stress?" Responses were categorized into 18 stress coping strategies, including Prayer/Religiosity (n = 22). Demographically, women endorsing prayer/religiosity (PR) were older (p < .001), more educated (p = .007), more likely to be married (p = .004), and had more children (p = .001) than non PR women. PR women were significantly less likely to report alcohol use (p = .028), tobacco use (p = .034), or have a positive prenatal drug screen (p = .045), and far more likely to breastfeed (p = .006) compared to Non PR women, all factors predictive of pregnancy and birth health. PR women did not differ from others in presence of complications, but they did have infants who were hospitalized fewer days at birth (p = .005).
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