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Craig K. Ewart

Researcher at Syracuse University

Publications -  79
Citations -  4705

Craig K. Ewart is an academic researcher from Syracuse University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Blood pressure & Anger. The author has an hindex of 34, co-authored 79 publications receiving 4544 citations. Previous affiliations of Craig K. Ewart include Johns Hopkins University & St. Agnes Hospital.

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The Effects of Nonpharmacologic Interventions on Blood Pressure of Persons With High Normal Levels: Results of the Trials of Hypertension Prevention, Phase I

TL;DR: Weight reduction is the most effective of the strategies tested for reducing blood pressure in normotensive persons, and sodium reduction is also effective.
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Biobehavioral variables and mortality or cardiac arrest in the Cardiac Arrhythmia Pilot Study (CAPS)

TL;DR: Results indicated that the type B behavior pattern, higher levels of depression and lower pulse rate reactivity to challenge were significant risk factors for death or cardiac arrest, after adjusting statistically for a set of known clinical predictors of disease severity.
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Effects of early postmyocardial infarction exercise testing on self-perception and subsequent physical activity

TL;DR: After MI, patients' perception of their capacity for physical activity and their actual patterns of subsequent physical activity are influenced by early treadmill testing in a manner which is congruent with these patients' treadmill performance.
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Social action theory for a public health psychology.

TL;DR: A social action view emphasizes social interdependence and interaction in personal control of health-endangering behavior and proposes mechanisms by which environmental structures influence cognitive action schemas, self-goals, and problem-solving activities critical to sustained behavioral change.
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Discovering how urban poverty and violence affect health: development and validation of a Neighborhood Stress Index

TL;DR: Data from an interracial sample of urban adolescents show the CSI to be internally consistent, stable, and correlated with census indices of social disadvantage.