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Does your color scheme really matter?

Call, Patricia; Jantzen, Kathleen
PMID: 22690503
ISSN: 1931-7093
CID: 180161

Types of abuse and cocaine use in pregnant women

Jantzen K; Ball SA; Leventhal JM; Schottenfeld RS
Previous research has found an association between childhood and adult physical and sexual abuse and substance abuse, but has not examined or compared specific dimensions of the abuse experience, such as its age of onset or the type, severity, or frequency. Women receiving perinatal care (N = 1189) at an inner-city hospital clinic were systematically questioned about their lifetime and current cocaine use and experiences of abuse. We found an association between a history of abuse in childhood and lifetime and current cocaine use, as well as physical and sexual abuse during childhood and pregnancy. There was no difference in the rates of cocaine use between women whose onset of abuse was in childhood versus adulthood. Childhood sexual abuse (alone or in combination with physical abuse) was more associated with lifetime cocaine use than was physical abuse alone. Cocaine use was related to the severity, but not the frequency of abuse
PMID: 9650140
ISSN: 0740-5472
CID: 21992

A study of the efficacy of a comprehensive memory enhancement program in healthy elderly persons

Mohs RC; Ashman TA; Jantzen K; Albert M; Brandt J; Gordon B; Rasmusson X; Grossman M; Jacobs D; Stern Y
Well educated, high functioning older adults (ages 60-90) were given a comprehensive memory enhancement training program to determine the effectiveness of the program in increasing cognitive performance and positively influencing self-assessments of memory efficacy. The 68 subjects who participated in the memory enhancement training were compared to 74 subjects who were enrolled in a video control group. Between subject differences were analyzed prior to the interventions and at three time points following the interventions (immediately post, 3 months and 6 months). Only one cognitive measure, assessing verbal memory, revealed a significant difference between the groups, with participants in the memory enhancement group showing less decline from baseline than the video control group immediately following the intervention but with no difference between groups at 6 months post-intervention. Several self-report measures showed that the memory enhancement training subjects experienced improved memory functioning and decreased memory concerns relative to the video control group. The self-reported effects of the training were sustained over the 6-month follow-up period
PMID: 9707301
ISSN: 0165-1781
CID: 21991