Meredith E. Rumble
Duke University
17 Papers
41 Citations
Meredith E. Rumble is an academic researcher from Duke University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Insomnia. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 11 publications. Previous affiliations of Meredith E. Rumble include University of Wisconsin-Madison.
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Papers
Psychological aspects of persistent pain: current state of the science ☆
TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide an overview of current research on psychological aspects of persistent pain, and highlight steps needed to advance this area of research including developing more comprehensive and integrative conceptual models, increasing attention to the social context of pain, examining the link of psychological factors to pain-related brain activation patterns, and investigating the mechanisms underlying the efficacy of psychological treatments for pain.
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Caregiver-assisted coping skills training for lung cancer: results of a randomized clinical trial
Laura S. Porter,Francis J. Keefe,Jennifer Garst,Donald H. Baucom,Colleen M. McBride,Daphne C. McKee,Linda Sutton,Kimberly M. Carson,Verena Knowles,Meredith E. Rumble,Cindy D. Scipio +10 more
TL;DR: Results from this study suggest that psychosocial interventions can lead to improvements in a range of outcomes for cancer patients.
156
Anger and persistent pain: current status and future directions.
TL;DR: Concepts used in anger research are described, representative clinical studies on anger and pain are highlighted, biopsychosocial mechanisms of anger-pain relationships are discussed, and treatment implications of this research are discussed.
106
A comparison of conventional pain coping skills training and pain coping skills training with a maintenance training component: a daily diary analysis of short- and long-term treatment effects.
James W. Carson,Francis J. Keefe,Glenn Affleck,Meredith E. Rumble,David S. Caldwell,Pat Beaupre,Susmita Kashikar-Zuck,Marlene J. Sandstrom,James N. Weisberg +8 more
TL;DR: For RA, a maintenance training component does not appear to produce significant improvements over conventional PCST, and results indicate similar results for both the conventional and the modified protocols.
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Behavioral medicine: 2002 and beyond.
TL;DR: Future directions for research and practice in behavioral medicine are highlighted, including social and environmental issues, the role of technology, translational research, improving and developing interventions, and professional training and retraining.
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