Kelli E. Canada
University of Missouri
59 Papers
258 Citations
Kelli E. Canada is an academic researcher from University of Missouri. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mental health & Mental health court. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 48 publications. Previous affiliations of Kelli E. Canada include DePauw University & University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee.
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Papers
Competition and Cooperation in the Five-Factor Model: Individual Differences in Achievement Orientation
TL;DR: Of NEO-PI-R predictors, Agreeableness was most important in characterizing differences between various achievement orientations and Openness and Conscientiousness were least helpful in differentiating among achievement Orientations.
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Intervening at the Entry Point: Differences in How CIT Trained and Non-CIT Trained Officers Describe Responding to Mental Health-Related Calls
TL;DR: Different in CIT and non-CIT officers’ response tactics to mental health-related calls and assessments of danger are found and a broader understanding of exhibited behaviors is described.
Self-handicapping and the Five Factor Model of personality: mediation between Neuroticism and Conscientiousness
TL;DR: Costa et al. as mentioned in this paper investigated the relationship between self-handicapping and the Five Factor Model as measured by the NEO-PI-R and found that self-harming was positively related to Neuroticism and negatively related to Conscientiousness.
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HIV-related stigma acting as predictors of unemployment of people living with HIV/AIDS
TL;DR: Findings from 156 quantitative interviews with employers across Chicago, Beijing, and Hong Kong regarding the hiring of people with HIV/AIDS showed that both fear of contagion and perceived incompetence are important factors in employers’ decision to interview even after controlling for variables related to the employers' business size, their education level, and the provision of health benefits.
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“’Cause Everybody Likes to Be Treated Good”: Perceptions of Procedural Justice Among Mental Health Court Participants
Kelli E. Canada,Amy C. Watson +1 more
TL;DR: There is mounting evidence that mental health courts (MHCs) reduce criminal recidivism and increase use of mental health services as mentioned in this paper, although not yet empirically tested, procedural justice has been p...
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