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George A. Bonanno

Researcher at Columbia University

Publications -  269
Citations -  35756

George A. Bonanno is an academic researcher from Columbia University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Grief & Psychological resilience. The author has an hindex of 76, co-authored 250 publications receiving 30634 citations. Previous affiliations of George A. Bonanno include University of Hong Kong & University of British Columbia.

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Symptoms of persistent complex bereavement disorder, depression, and PTSD in a conjugally bereaved sample: a network analysis.

TL;DR: The network approach offered insights regarding the core symptoms of PCBD and the role of persistent yearnings, suggesting how symptoms lead into psychopathological configurations.
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Doing and being well (for the most part): adaptive patterns of narrative self-evaluation during bereavement.

TL;DR: Narrative self-evaluation patterns were studied in relation to longitudinal measures of adaptation to the death of a spouse in midlife and the tendency to focus on evaluations of what one does rather than what one is predicted lower grief levels over time.
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Is the intensive care unit traumatic? What we know and don't know about the intensive care unit and posttraumatic stress responses.

TL;DR: This review focuses on multiple aspects of the important but complex research question of whether the ICU confers risk for psychological distress above and beyond the traumatic impact of the serious health events that necessitate ICU treatment.
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A longitudinal investigation of changes to social resources associated with psychological distress among Kurdish torture survivors living in Northern Iraq.

TL;DR: This longitudinal study evaluated whether baseline psychological distress symptoms and changes in these symptoms were associated with changes in social resources 5 months later among adult male and female treatment-seeking torture survivors residing in Kurdistan, Iraq.
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The hidden price and possible benefit of repeated traumatic exposure

TL;DR: The results suggest that repeated traumatic exposure has both positive and negative consequences on the way individuals interpret and react to their environment, and in high-intensity conditions trauma-exposed individuals outperformed unexposed controls when completing simple tasks in high intensity conditions.