Who benefits from emotional expression? An examination of personality differences among gynaecological cancer patients participating in a randomized controlled emotional disclosure intervention trial.

scientific article published on 16 March 2011

Who benefits from emotional expression? An examination of personality differences among gynaecological cancer patients participating in a randomized controlled emotional disclosure intervention trial. is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

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P356DOI10.1348/000712610X524949
P698PubMed publication ID21751994

P2093author name stringMichele Herzer
Sandra G Zakowski
Jessica Gerfen Milligan
Nancy Beckman
Sara Dittoe Barrett
P2860cites workNegative affectivity: the disposition to experience aversive emotional statesQ28267580
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Changes in cognitive coping strategies predict EBV-antibody titre change following a stressor disclosure inductionQ39195205
Who does expressive writing work for? Examination of alexithymia, splitting, and repressive coping style as moderators of the expressive writing paradigmQ40129632
Coping and communication-enhancing intervention versus supportive counseling for women diagnosed with gynecological cancersQ40188385
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Experimental disclosure and its moderators: a meta-analysisQ46919685
Emotional expressivity and intrusive cognitions in women with family histories of breast cancer: Application of a cognitive processing modelQ47407014
Emotionally expressive coping predicts psychological and physical adjustment to breast cancerQ47585664
Are alexithymia and emotional characteristics of disclosure associated with blood pressure reactivity and psychological distress following written emotional disclosure?Q50894824
Written emotional expression: effect sizes, outcome types, and moderating variables.Q50904711
Gender, neuroticism, and emotional expressivity: effects on spousal constraints among individuals with cancer.Q50957150
Written emotional disclosure buffers the effects of social constraints on distress among cancer patients.Q50986800
Social barriers to emotional expression and their relations to distress in male and female cancer patientsQ51015182
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Assumptive Worlds and the Stress of Traumatic Events: Applications of the Schema ConstructQ56700448
Writing About Emotional Experiences as a Therapeutic ProcessQ57252920
Cognitive, Emotional, and Language Processes in DisclosureQ57252921
Action, Emotion, and Personality: Emerging Conceptual IntegrationQ57253751
Does Emotional Non-Expressiveness or Avoidance Interfere with Writing about Stressful Life Events? An Analysis in Patients with Chronic IllnessQ57939197
P433issue3
P304page(s)355-372
P577publication date2011-03-16
P1433published inBritish Journal of PsychologyQ15762551
P1476titleWho benefits from emotional expression? An examination of personality differences among gynaecological cancer patients participating in a randomized controlled emotional disclosure intervention trial.
P478volume102

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q30581298Computer-based written emotional disclosure: the effects of advance or real-time guidance and moderation by Big 5 personality traits
Q35752294Emotion episodes during psychotherapy sessions among women newly diagnosed with gynecological cancers
Q41666768Examination of moderators of expressive writing in patients with renal cell carcinoma: the role of depression and social support.
Q34458927Expressive Writing Can Impede Emotional Recovery Following Marital Separation
Q37120415Expressive talking among caregivers of hematopoietic stem cell transplant survivors: acceptability and concurrent subjective, objective, and physiologic indicators of emotion
Q38232909Expressive writing interventions in cancer patients: a systematic review.
Q37978228Who benefits from psychosocial interventions in oncology? A systematic review of psychological moderators of treatment outcome.

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