11 Papers
6 Citations
Jerry Suls is an academic researcher from The Feinstein Institute for Medical Research. The author has contributed to research in topics: Public health & Health psychology. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 11 publications.
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Papers
Health behaviour change in cardiovascular disease prevention and management: meta-review of behaviour change techniques to affect self-regulation
Jerry Suls,Jazmin N. Mogavero,Louise Falzon,Linda S. Pescatello,Emily A. Hennessy,Karina W. Davidson +5 more
TL;DR: Self-monitoring, the most frequently studied self-regulatory BCT, seemed to improve health behaviour change and health outcomes but these results merit cautious interpretation, and Findings for other self-regulation BCTs were less promising.
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Realizing the Promise of SocialPsychology in Improving Public Health
William M. P. Klein,James A. Shepperd,Jerry Suls,Alexander J. Rothman,Robert T. Croyle +4 more
- 01 Jan 2014
TL;DR: This article identified opportunities for research at the interface of social psychology and health, delineate barriers, and offer strategies that can address these barriers as the discipline continues to evolve, and found that only 3.2% of 467 studies explored health-related topics.
Social Comparison Features in Physical Activity Promotion Apps: Scoping Meta-Review.
TL;DR: No evidence was found that important findings from the broader social comparison literature have been incorporated in the design of existing PA apps, which creates confusion about how to best harness social comparison to increase PA and its effectiveness in future research.
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Measuring Multimorbidity: Selecting the Right Instrument for the Purpose and the Data Source.
Jerry Suls,Elizabeth A. Bayliss,Elizabeth A. Bayliss,Jay G. Berry,Jay G. Berry,Arlene S. Bierman,Elizabeth A. Chrischilles,Tilda Farhat,Martin Fortin,Siran M. Koroukian,Ana Quiñones,Jeffrey H. Silber,Brian W. Ward,Melissa Y. Wei,Deborah Young-Hyman,Carrie N. Klabunde +15 more
TL;DR: A broad range of instruments and data sources available to assess multimorbidity and offer guidance about selecting appropriate measures were reviewed and guidance developed during a special expert workshop sponsored by the National Institutes of Health on September 25-26, 2018 as mentioned in this paper.
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Clinical Usefulness of Bright White Light Therapy for Depressive Symptoms in Cancer Survivors: Results from a Series of Personalized (N-of-1) Trials.
Ian M. Kronish,Ying Kuen Cheung,Jacob Julian,Faith Parsons,Jenny Lee,Sunmoo Yoon,Heiddis B. Valdimarsdottir,Paige Green,Jerry Suls,Dawn L. Hershman,Karina W. Davidson +10 more
TL;DR: There were heterogeneous effects of three-week BWL on self-reported depressive symptoms among cancer survivors, with some finding a benefit but others finding no benefit or even harm.
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