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Ashley L. Merianos

Researcher at University of Cincinnati

Publications -  171
Citations -  1434

Ashley L. Merianos is an academic researcher from University of Cincinnati. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Tobacco smoke. The author has an hindex of 15, co-authored 132 publications receiving 918 citations. Previous affiliations of Ashley L. Merianos include Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center & Texas A&M University.

Papers
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Students' benefits and barriers to mental health help-seeking

TL;DR: Findings indicated that females perceived a greater number of benefits to having participated in mental health services and held significantly lower stigma-related attitudes than did males.
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Vigorous Physical Activity Among College Students: Using the Health Belief Model to Assess Involvement and Social Support

TL;DR: The authors examined college students' perceived benefits, barriers, cues to action, and extent of involvement in vigorous physical activity and found significant correlations between the number of perceived benefits and cues to exercise was associated with higher participation in physical activity.
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Tobacco smoke exposure disparities persist in U.S. children: NHANES 1999-2014.

TL;DR: Investigation of how the prevalence of TSE varied from 1999 to 2014 among U.S. children and associations between sociodemographic characteristics and TSE by two-year increases concluded that targeted tobacco control efforts are needed to reduce existing TSE disparities among children.
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Preliminary evidence that high levels of nicotine on children’s hands may contribute to overall tobacco smoke exposure

TL;DR: The higher-than-expected nicotine levels and significant association with cotinine indicate that THS may play a role in the overall exposure of young children to tobacco smoke toxicants and that hand wipes could be a useful marker of overall tobacco smoke pollution and a proxy for exposure.
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Authoritarian parenting and youth depression: Results from a national study

TL;DR: Examining depression and authoritarian parenting among youth from 12 to 17 years of age revealed that those who reported experiencing authoritarian parenting practices were more likely to report depressive symptoms compared to their counterparts who experienced authoritative parenting practices.