H
Hannah K. Allen
Researcher at Pennsylvania State University
Publications - 27
Citations - 314
Hannah K. Allen is an academic researcher from Pennsylvania State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Poison control & Mental health. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 27 publications receiving 178 citations. Previous affiliations of Hannah K. Allen include University of Maryland, College Park & University of Mississippi.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Prevalence and incidence of drug use among college students: an 8-year longitudinal analysis
Amelia M. Arria,Kimberly M. Caldeira,Hannah K. Allen,Brittany A. Bugbee,Kathryn B. Vincent,Kevin E. O'Grady +5 more
TL;DR: Drug use is prevalent among college students, and drug use persists among young adults, even after many have graduated college, according to a longitudinal study of first-time, first-year students at a university in the mid-Atlantic US.
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Drinking Like an Adult? Trajectories of Alcohol Use Patterns Before and After College Graduation.
Amelia M. Arria,Kimberly M. Caldeira,Hannah K. Allen,Kathryn B. Vincent,Brittany A. Bugbee,Kevin E. O'Grady +5 more
TL;DR: The authors examined longitudinal changes in quantity and frequency of alcohol consumption between the college years and the 4 years after graduation and explore variation in these changes by gender and race/ethnicity, concluding that the post-college "maturing-out" phenomenon might be attributable to decreases in alcohol quantity but not frequency.
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Stress and Burnout Among Graduate Students: Moderation by Sleep Duration and Quality.
TL;DR: Improving sleep habits has the potential to lessen the negative association between stress and graduate student functioning, and neither sleep duration nor sleep quality moderated the relationships betweenstress and cynicism or stress and inefficacy.
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Substance use and mental health problems among graduate students: Individual and program-level correlates.
Hannah K. Allen,Flavius R. W. Lilly,Kerry M. Green,Faika Zanjani,Kathryn B. Vincent,Amelia M. Arria +5 more
TL;DR: Students in the behavioral and social sciences, social work, and arts and humanities disciplines were more likely to use substances and report mental health problems than engineering and business students.
Journal ArticleDOI
Drug involvement during and after college: Estimates of opportunity and use given opportunity.
Hannah K. Allen,Kimberly M. Caldeira,Brittany A. Bugbee,Kathryn B. Vincent,Kevin E. O'Grady,Amelia M. Arria +5 more
TL;DR: Greater opportunity to use and use of all drugs during the college years in comparison with the post-college years confirms the high-risk nature of the college environment.