Tamara M. Williamson
University of Calgary
14 Papers
2 Citations
Tamara M. Williamson is an academic researcher from University of Calgary. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Rehabilitation. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 12 publications.
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Papers
Potentially Modifiable Factors Associated with Adherence to Adjuvant Endocrine Therapy among Breast Cancer Survivors: A Systematic Review.
TL;DR: In this paper, a systematic review examined potentially modifiable factors associated with adherence to AET in accordance with PRISMA guidelines (PROSPERO registration ID: CRD42019124200).
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The Influence of Weight-Related Self-Esteem and Symptoms of Depression on Shape and Weight Concerns and Weight-Loss 12 Months After Bariatric Surgery.
Ashley N Felske,Tamara M. Williamson,Samantha R. M. Scurrey,Jo Ann Telfer,Tavis S. Campbell,Joshua A. Rash +5 more
TL;DR: Investigatory analyses indicated that improvements in weight-related self-esteem, and concerns over shape and weight, but not symptoms of depression were associated with improvement in Weight-loss.
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Bridging the intention-behavior gap for cardiac rehabilitation participation: the role of perceived barriers.
Tamara M. Williamson,Codie R. Rouleau,Codie R. Rouleau,Sandeep Aggarwal,Ross Arena,Tavis S. Campbell +5 more
TL;DR: Perceived cardiac rehabilitation barriers influence whether patients successfully translate their intention to attend into actual program participation, and Enhancing self-efficacy to overcome barriers may represent an important intervention target among prospective cardiac rehabilitation patients.
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Cancer and cardiovascular disease: The impact of cardiac rehabilitation and cardiorespiratory fitness on survival.
Tamara M. Williamson,Chelsea Moran,Daniele Chirico,Ross Arena,Ross Arena,Cemal Ozemek,Sandeep Aggarwal,Tavis S. Campbell,Deepika Laddu +8 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the association between CR completion and survival, and whether CRF improvements translate to increased survival among patients with comorbid cancer and CVD, and highlighted the survival benefits of completing a CR program among CVD patients who experience added barriers imposed by cancer treatment and survival.
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Proof of Concept for a Mindfulness-Informed Intervention for Eating Disorder Symptoms, Self-Efficacy, and Emotion Regulation among Bariatric Surgery Candidates.
Ashley N Felske,Tamara M. Williamson,Joshua A. Rash,Jo Ann Telfer,Kirsti I Toivonen,Tavis S. Campbell +5 more
TL;DR: Evaluated the impact of a pre-surgical mindfulness-informed intervention on ED symptoms and potential mechanisms-of-action to inform optimization of the intervention, and found participation in the MII was associated with improvements inED symptoms and some mechanisms- of-action, establishing proof of concept for the intervention.
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