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Everett L. Worthington
Researcher at Virginia Commonwealth University
Publications - 351
Citations - 21903
Everett L. Worthington is an academic researcher from Virginia Commonwealth University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Forgiveness & Humility. The author has an hindex of 64, co-authored 340 publications receiving 19789 citations. Previous affiliations of Everett L. Worthington include National Institutes of Health & University of Missouri.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Psychological and spiritual outcomes during the COVID-19 pandemic: A prospective longitudinal study of adults with chronic disease.
Edward B. Davis,Stacey E. McElroy-Heltzel,Austin W. Lemke,Richard G. Cowden,Tyler J. VanderWeele,Everett L. Worthington,Kevin J. Glowiak,Laura Shannonhouse,Don E. Davis,Joshua N. Hook,Daryl R. Van Tongeren,Jamie D. Aten +11 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a prospective longitudinal study examined whether coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has led to changes in psychological and spiritual outcomes among adults with chronic disease.
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Religiously or spiritually-motivated forgiveness and subsequent health and well-being among young adults: An outcome-wide analysis
TL;DR: All forgiveness measures were positively associated with all psychosocial well-being outcomes, and inversely associated with depressive and anxiety symptoms, and there was little association between forgiveness and behavioral or physical health outcomes.
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Forgiveness and Interpersonal Relationships: A Nepalese Investigation
David Watkins,Eadaoin K. P. Hui,Wenshu Luo,Murari Regmi,Everett L. Worthington,Joshua N. Hook,Don E. Davis +6 more
TL;DR: Forgiveness was strongly related to conciliatory behavior and motivations for avoidance and revenge toward the offender and decisional forgiveness was a stronger predictor of motivations for revenge than was emotional forgiveness.
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The Marriage Relationship During the Transition to Parenthood: A Review and a Model
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a review of major theoretical approaches and summarizes pertinent research concerning each theory and identify three critical variables: disruption of time schedules, conflict over relationship rules, and adjustment of the couple prior to the transition.