Publications by authors named "Garey L"

Interoceptive exposure (IE) exercises are underused, especially in people with chronic physical health problems. Secondary data analyses were conducted to examine the use of and acute responses to IE exercises in individuals with and without a history of chronic physical health problem(s). Participants ( = 413; Mage = 38.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • - Black individuals who smoke experience higher rates of tobacco-related health issues, which are influenced by stress related to their minority status and anxiety sensitivity (AS).
  • - A study tested a smartphone app, the Mobile Anxiety Sensitivity Program for Smoking (MASP), designed to help Black smokers with high AS quit smoking and reduce their AS.
  • - The trial with 24 participants showed high app usage, excellent retention, good participant feedback, and a significant reduction in anxiety sensitivity, with 25% of participants achieving short-term smoking abstinence.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: The Cigarette Purchase Tasks (CPT) measures the relative reinforcing value of cigarettes (i.e., cigarette demand).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Black/African American (hereafter, Black) adults who smoke are at risk for tobacco-related health disparities in the United States (US). Although racial-based stressors (e.g.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Although rates of cigarette smoking have declined in the US, many individuals report experiencing significant barriers to quitting smoking, including poor mental health. Two prominent affective vulnerability factors that independently underlie both smoking behavior and processes and mental health include distress tolerance and anxiety sensitivity. However, limited work has examined the concurrent role of these factors on motivational reasons for smoking.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: African American/Black (hereafter referred to as Black) persons who smoke constitute a tobacco disparities group in the United States. Within the Black population, female smokers experience a disproportionate percentage of these disparities and are less likely to quit cigarettes than their male counterparts. Two factors implicated in female smokers' relatively worse quit success are (1) motives to smoke to reduce negative affect and (2) expectancies that smoking will reduce negative affect.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The study looked at how approach bias (the tendency to move towards things you crave, like smoking) affects people's ability to quit smoking.
  • Researchers tested a method called approach bias retraining (ABR) to help smokers avoid their cravings and improve their chances of quitting.
  • Results showed that when smokers had lower approach bias and cravings, they were more likely to stay smoke-free during treatment, suggesting that ABR can be a helpful tool for quitting.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Smoking is a public health crisis, leading to a multitude of health complications. Exercise is associated with numerous health benefits and is accepted by health professionals and smokers as a potentially effective smoking cessation aid. This chapter discusses the extant literature on the relation between exercise and smoking, including cross-sectional studies, experiments, and randomized clinical trials.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Black adults who smoke and have HIV experience immense stressors (eg, racial discrimination and HIV stigma) that impede smoking cessation success and perpetuate smoking-related health disparities. These stressors also place Black adults who smoke and have HIV at an increased risk of elevated interoceptive stress (eg, anxiety and uncomfortable bodily sensations) and smoking to manage symptoms. In turn, this population is more likely to smoke to manage interoceptive stress, which contributes to worse HIV-related outcomes in this group.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: African American or Black (hereafter referred to as Black) adults who use cannabis use it more frequently and are more likely to meet criteria for cannabis use disorder (CUD) than both White and Hispanic or Latin individuals. Black adults may be more apt to use cannabis to cope with distress, which constitutes a false safety behavior (FSB; a behavior designed to reduce psychological distress in the short term). Although FSB engagement can perpetuate the cycle of high rates of CUD among Black individuals, limited work has applied an FSB elimination treatment approach to Black adults with CUD, and no previous work has evaluated FSB reduction or elimination in the context of a culturally tailored and highly accessible treatment developed for Black individuals.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: Black individuals who smoke in the United States experience significant tobacco-related disparities. Although prior work has established that smoking abstinence expectancies play an important role in smoking-related outcomes, few studies have examined potential individual difference factors that may be relevant to smoking abstinence expectancies among Black individuals who smoke. The present study investigated anxiety sensitivity and distress tolerance in relation to smoking abstinence expectancies among a sample of Black individuals who smoke.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Limited work has focused on understanding the function of individual difference factors in terms of mental health among sexual minority college students. Anxiety sensitivity is one individual difference factor which has received substantial empirical attention, but its role is presently understudied among racially/ethnically diverse sexual minority college students. Participants included a racially and ethnically diverse sample of sexual minority college students ( = 217; = 20.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Introduction: Cannabis use among individuals who smoke is prevalent in the general population and related to adverse health effects, including higher levels of interoceptive perturbation (i.e., a disturbance in internal experiences).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

: Latinx individuals experience significant tobacco cigarette smoking-related diseases and illnesses. Although most Latinx smokers report a desire to quit smoking, evidenced-based cessation treatments are underutilized in this group, which may partially be due to lower likelihood of receiving advice from a healthcare professional. Further, there are a lack of cessation treatments that account for comorbid symptoms/conditions (e.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Maladaptive eating patterns and behaviors are frequently documented in relation to obesity onset and management. To better understand these occurrences, it is important to examine psychological processes that may be guiding these patterns and behaviors. The current study examined the role of psychological inflexibility on emotional eating, food cravings, and disordered eating symptoms among 161 participants (60.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The experience of perceived ethnic discrimination is prevalent and has harmful effects across various behavioral health processes among Latinx persons. Yet, there is limited work on the association between perceived ethnic discrimination and smoking among this health disparities group. Building from initial work that has demonstrated a relationship between perceived ethnic discrimination and smoking abstinence expectancies, the present study sought to explore mechanisms by which perceived ethnic discrimination may be related to cigarette dependence.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The study aimed to create a way to measure how people from different racial or ethnic backgrounds react emotionally to stress they face because of their identity.
  • In the first part of the study, researchers created a 15-question survey and tested it on over a thousand people to make sure it worked well and measured what it was supposed to.
  • The results showed that this survey could help understand how stress affects mental health and behaviors, especially in people from Latinx backgrounds, linking high stress responses with health problems and poor well-being.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Introduction: Cigarette smoking remains the leading preventable cause of death and disability in the United States and frequently co-occurs with anxiety and depressive symptoms. A novel and integrative, theory-driven approach to address the heterogeneity of mood-related symptoms associated with cigarette use is to focus on transdiagnostic processes, such as distress tolerance, that underpin both mood-related symptoms and smoking behavior. The current study sought to develop and examine the feasibility, acceptability, and initial efficacy of a digitally delivered integrated personalized feedback intervention (PFI) that addresses smoking-distress tolerance relations.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • - The study focuses on dual users of combustible cigarettes and e-cigarettes, investigating how pain impacts their ability to quit either product.
  • - Research shows that greater pain severity among these users correlates with higher dependence and negative thoughts about e-cigarette use.
  • - The findings reveal that pain interference significantly affects perceived barriers to quitting both combustible cigarettes and e-cigarettes among adult dual users, highlighting the need for more comprehensive quitting strategies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: The Latinx/Hispanic (hereafter, Latinx) population in the United States (US) experiences significant tobacco-related health disparities. Extant work suggests social determinants of health (SDoH) such as perceived discrimination is an individual differences factor for cigarette smoking behavior among Latinx individuals who smoke cigarettes. Other research has suggested sensitivity to internal cues, referred to as anxiety sensitivity, is related to smoking among Latinx adults, but this work has not explored whether anxiety sensitivity may moderate the association between perceived discrimination and smoking behavior.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Electronic cigarette (ECIG) use has become a popular method for nicotine delivery. Combustible cigarette (CC) cessation or reduction are the primary reasons for ECIG uptake among adults. Yet, most CC smokers who initiate ECIG use do not fully transition from CC to ECIG, despite intending to quit CC completely.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • People who have experienced trauma and have posttraumatic stress symptoms (like feeling really stressed or scared) are more likely to have problems with opioid painkillers, especially when they also have chronic pain.
  • Pain-related anxiety, which is when someone worries a lot about their pain and what it could do to them, affects how much these people misuse opioids.
  • The study found that people with more pain-related anxiety had a stronger connection between their posttraumatic stress symptoms and problems with opioid use than those with less anxiety. This shows we should pay attention to pain-related anxiety in people dealing with trauma and chronic pain.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

There is a well-established relation between anxiety psychopathology and smoking in the general population. However, little work focuses on Latinx/Hispanic (hereafter Latinx) persons who smoke from this comorbidity perspective. The present investigation aimed to explore differences among English-speaking Latinx adults who live in the United States (US) and smoke cigarettes with and without a probable anxiety disorder in terms of cigarette dependence, perceived barriers for quitting, severity of problems when quitting, and smoking abstinence expectancies.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Opioid misuse in the context of pain management exacts a significant public health burden. Past work has established linkages between negative mood (i.e.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF