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Christine M. Davis

Researcher at Rutgers University

Publications -  19
Citations -  364

Christine M. Davis is an academic researcher from Rutgers University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Alcohol use disorder & Project MATCH. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 18 publications receiving 335 citations. Previous affiliations of Christine M. Davis include University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey & Columbia University Medical Center.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Alcohol Treatment Research Assessment Exposure Subject Reactivity Effects: Part I. Alcohol Use and Related Consequences

TL;DR: Research assessment exposure subject reactivity effects were related significantly to alcohol use and related negative consequences, such that subjects assigned to the infrequent-brief research assessment exposure condition reported the poorest outcomes.
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Moderate drinking in the first year after treatment as a predictor of three-year outcomes.

TL;DR: First-year posttreatment alcohol use on the group level predicts longer-term alcohol use and related functioning, and moderate drinking may be considered a treatment goal option for some individuals.
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Alcohol treatment research assessment exposure subject reactivity effects: part II. Treatment engagement and involvement.

TL;DR: Experimental evidence is provided for a causal relationship between frequency of assessment and comprehensiveness of assessment on substance abuse-treatment engagement and involvement and for treatment participation to not mediate the reactivity effects of alcohol use and related consequences.
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Alcohol treatment research assessment exposure: a critical review of the literature.

TL;DR: Reviewing the alcohol treatment research literature on assessment exposure resulting in subject reactivity indicates that during and posttreatment data collection activities positively influence clinical outcomes, although there appears to be important differences in regard to the mechanisms by which these 2 data collection Activities exert their influence.
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Drinking in the year after treatment as a predictor of three-year drinking outcomes.

TL;DR: This study confirmed the strong relationship between first-year abstinence and later drinking but did not show that participants who engaged in moderate drinking during the first year had positive alcohol-use outcomes at 3 years.