Publications by authors named "Nicole Rodriguez"

Purpose: Childhood or adolescent cancer survivors (CACS) are an understudied population in Colombia and, in general, in Central and South America. Worldwide, studies typically focus on high-income settings while approaching CACS' experiences from a biomedical or psychological perspective. However, both perspectives miss an important aspect of survivorship after childhood or adolescent cancer: the affected individual's subjective experiences of having a disabled body.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study assessed a 4-week forgiveness campaign among 2,878 Colombian students to see its impact on forgiveness, mental health, and overall well-being, finding positive results post-campaign.
  • - Participants engaged in an average of 7.18 campaign activities, with a stronger participation linked to increased feelings of forgiveness; however, not all activities were equally effective.
  • - The intervention led to improvements in mental health and flourishing, emphasizing the importance of forgiveness initiatives in community health, although past conflicts might require strategic leadership support for success.
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Rodriguez et al. (2022) discovered that teaching four component skills was sufficient to facilitate the emergence of intraverbal tacts across four applications with three participants. Our study replicated and evaluated an extension of this procedure that was directed at facilitating intraverbal tacts when a child learns the component skills but continues to fail to produce intraverbal tacts.

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Autoclitics are secondary verbal operants that are controlled by a feature of the conditions that occasion or evoke a primary verbal operant such as a tact or mand. Qualifying autoclitics extend, negate, or assert a speaker's primary verbal response and modify the intensity or direction of the listener's behavior. Howard and Rice (1988) established autoclitics that indicated weak stimulus control (e.

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There is limited knowledge regarding Colombian patients with advanced cancer preferences regarding their final moments, place of death, and post-death wishes. To better understand these preferences, we conducted 23 in-depth interviews with patients between the ages of 28 and 78 receiving treatment at two academic hospitals and the National Cancer Institute. While many participants desired a peaceful death, few were comfortable discussing the topic of death directly.

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Objective: Focusing on potential missed injury rates and sensitivity of low-risk of injury predictions, we sought to evaluate the accuracy of physician gestalt in predicting clinically significant injury (CSI) in the abdomen and pelvis among blunt trauma patients presenting to the emergency department (ED).

Methods: We collected gestalt data on physicians caring for adult blunt trauma patients who received abdominal/pelvic computed tomography (CT) at three Level I and one Level II trauma centers. The primary outcome of CSI was defined as injury on abdominal/pelvic CT requiring hospitalization or intervention.

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Objective: The mortality rate of schizophrenia patients is higher than that of the general population; cardiovascular disease (CVD) is their leading cause of death. This issue must be studied since people with schizophrenia are disproportionately burdened with CVD. Therefore, our goal was to identify the prevalence of CVD and other comorbidities, stratified by age and gender, in patients with schizophrenia living in Puerto Rico.

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Background: Perceived deficits in executive functioning are among the many difficulties that women diagnosed with breast cancer experience. This study assessed the presence of perceived deficits in executive functioning among women with breast cancer prior to systemic treatment and radiation and associations between perceived deficits in executive function and comorbid fatigue, sleep, and mood disturbance.

Method: Participants were recruited following their breast cancer diagnosis and assessed using the Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Function for Adults (BRIEF-A), subjective and objective measures of sleep duration and efficiency, and self-report measures of insomnia severity, sleep quality, fatigue, and mood disturbance.

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Ecological validity refers to how closely an experiment aligns with real-world phenomena. In applied behavioral research, ecological validity may guide decisions about experimental settings, stimuli, people, and other design features. However, inconsistent use of the term ecological validity in the published literature has led to a somewhat disjointed technology.

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Introduction: Food sensitization is a first and strong indicator of immune deviation in the progression to other allergic conditions. Sensitization to food or other allergens and related inflammation during critical windows of infant development may adversely affect neurodevelopmental milestones. However, additional research is needed to test this association further.

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Background: Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and pregnancy both impact health-related quality of life (HRQoL). However, little is known about IBD-related HRQoL around pregnancy.

Aims: To assess the trajectory and predictors of HRQoL in preconception and pregnant patients with Crohn's disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC).

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Introduction: Epidemiologic studies are starting to report associations between antibiotic use in early life and neurodevelopmental disorders. Through mechanisms within the gut microbiota-brain axis, indeed, it is plausible that infant antibiotic treatment plays a role in the development of atopic disease and neurodevelopmental disorders.

Areas Covered: This narrative review summarizes and interprets published evidence on infant antibiotic use in future outcomes of atopic disease, and neurodevelopmental delay and disorders, including attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and autism spectrum disorder (ASD).

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Intraverbal tacts are an example of multiply controlled verbal behavior. More specifically, they are verbal responses under control of both a nonverbal (visual) stimulus (e.g.

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Depressive symptoms are common during pregnancy and are estimated to affect 7-20% of pregnant women, with higher prevalence found in those with a prior history of depression, in ethnic minorities, and those with increased exposure to stressful life events. Maternal depression often remains undiagnosed, and its symptoms can increase adverse health risks to the infant, including impaired cognitive development, behavioral problems, and higher susceptibility to physical illnesses. Accumulating research evidence supports the association between maternal physical health elements to infant gut health, including factors such as mode of delivery, medication, feeding status, and antibiotic use.

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Unlabelled: We taught three children with autism how to respond to abduction lures presented by strangers. We then tested undesirable generalization of the safety response to matched instructions to leave by a familiar adult. Following training, all three participants engaged in the safety response across both strangers and familiar adults.

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This article highlights the second stage of athletic development, the Developmental Stage. In this article we build awareness in growth and maturation, highlighting a 3-stage process through the use of the Khamis-Roche protocol. We covered an introduction to Strength Development for athletes in the developmental stage.

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This study assessed children's and caregivers' preferences for various arrangements of negative reinforcement, including differential negative reinforcement of an alternative behavior (DNRA), noncontingent escape (NCE), and escape extinction. In the first treatment comparison, the DNRA and NCE treatments similarly decreased problem behavior, but all 3 children preferred DNRA. By contrast, 3 of 4 caregivers preferred escape extinction, likely due to increased compliance in this condition.

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Background: Women with breast cancer are more likely to develop cognitive impairment (CI), insomnia, fatigue, and mood disturbance than individuals with other cancers. The main objectives of this study were to establish the prevalence of CI and examine the relationships between CI, insomnia, fatigue, and mood over the first year of breast cancer treatment.

Methods: Participants were recruited after diagnosis and completed validated measures of insomnia, objective and perceived CI, fatigue, and mood disturbance at four time points during the first year of treatment.

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Objectives: Young adults (YAs) are vulnerable to insomnia and mood disturbance. YAs also engage in back-lit device use which has been implicated in the development and maintenance of insomnia. This study explored the association between device use, mood disturbance, and insomnia symptoms in YAs.

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Researchers have demonstrated the efficacy of picture prompts on the acquisition of intraverbals (Coon & Miguel in , 657-666, 2012; Goldsmith, LeBlanc, & Sautter in , 1-13, 2007; Ingvarsson & Hollobaugh in , 659-664, 2011; Ingvarsson & Le in , 75-93, 2011; Miguel, Petursdottir, & Carr in , 27-41, 2005; Partington & Bailey in , 9-18, 1993). However, no one (to our knowledge) has determined the effects of picture prompts on the variability of responding during intraverbal categorization. We evaluated the use of a scenic picture prompt on response variability during the acquisition of intraverbal categorization with 4 children diagnosed with autism.

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Under naturally occurring conditions, the individual who is the target of aggression is likely to physically react to evade the aggressor and avoid physical harm. Like other forms of attention that occur following problem behavior, physical reactions may maintain problem behavior. However, evaluating the effects of physical reactions is complicated by issues related to therapists' ability to consistently and safely control their reactions, which may prove difficult to achieve in functional analyses.

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