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Cynthia R. Pearson

Researcher at University of Washington

Publications -  71
Citations -  3500

Cynthia R. Pearson is an academic researcher from University of Washington. The author has contributed to research in topics: Psychological intervention & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 24, co-authored 60 publications receiving 3056 citations. Previous affiliations of Cynthia R. Pearson include Capital Medical University.

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Efficacy of MyPEEPS Mobile, an HIV Prevention Intervention Using Mobile Technology, on Reducing Sexual Risk Among Same-Sex Attracted Adolescent Males

TL;DR: The MyPEEPS Mobile intervention reduced short-term sexual risk for HIV infection in same-sex attracted adolescent males, a population at high risk of HIV infection.
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Development of MyPEEPS Mobile: A Behavioral Health Intervention for Young Men.

TL;DR: This is the first study to test the efficacy of a scaled-up, mobile version of an existing HIV prevention intervention originally developed, designed, and piloted for, a diverse group of YMSM.
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A randomized comparison trial of culturally adapted HIV prevention approaches for Native Americans reducing trauma symptoms versus substance misuse: The Healing Seasons protocol

TL;DR: The Healing Seasons study is a randomized comparsion trial of two counseling strategies, Narrative Exposure Therapy addressing PTSD or Motivational interviewing with cognitive behavioral therapy skills training addressing substance misuse as a means to prevent HIV among NA.
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Third‐Party Intervention in Peer Victimization: Self‐Evaluative Emotions and Appraisals of a Diverse Adolescent Sample

TL;DR: Adolescents felt prouder, more helpful, more like a good friend, and expected more peer approval after calming and resolving than after amplifying anger or avenging peers, and felt less guilt and shame after calmed and resolving.
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Discussion and revision of the mathematical modeling tool described in the previously published article "Modeling HIV Transmission risk among Mozambicans prior to their initiating highly active antiretroviral therapy".

TL;DR: A revision of the simple analytically tractable deterministic model to estimate the number of secondary HIV infections stemming from a population of HIV-positive Mozambicans is described, recommending adjusting the population-level sexually transmitted infection parameters to be applicable to the individual-level model specification by accounting for the proportion of individuals uninfected with an STI.