H
Heather D. Hadjistavropoulos
Researcher at University of Regina
Publications - 192
Citations - 5962
Heather D. Hadjistavropoulos is an academic researcher from University of Regina. The author has contributed to research in topics: Anxiety & Randomized controlled trial. The author has an hindex of 37, co-authored 167 publications receiving 4650 citations. Previous affiliations of Heather D. Hadjistavropoulos include University of British Columbia & University of Saskatchewan.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Pain in the preterm neonate: behavioural and physiological indices.
Kenneth D. Craig,Michael F. Whitfield,Ruth E. Grunau,Julie Linton,Heather D. Hadjistavropoulos +4 more
TL;DR: Examination of facial activity, body movements, and physiological measures in 56 preterm and full‐term newborns in response to heel lancing indicated that reactions of greatest magnitude were to the lancing procedure.
Journal ArticleDOI
Internet-Based Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Depression: A Systematic Review and Individual Patient Data Network Meta-analysis.
Eirini Karyotaki,Eirini Karyotaki,Eirini Karyotaki,Orestis Efthimiou,Orestis Efthimiou,Clara Miguel,Clara Miguel,Frederic Maas genannt Bermpohl,Toshi A. Furukawa,Toshi A. Furukawa,Pim Cuijpers,Pim Cuijpers,Heleen Riper,Heleen Riper,Vikram Patel,Adriana Mira,Alan W Gemmil,Albert Yeung,Alfred Lange,Alishia D. Williams,Andrew Mackinnon,Andrew Mackinnon,Anna C. M. Geraedts,Annemieke van Straten,Annemieke van Straten,Björn Meyer,Cecilia Björkelund,Christine Knaevelsrud,Christopher G. Beevers,Cristina Botella,Cristina Botella,Daniel R. Strunk,David C. Mohr,David Daniel Ebert,David Kessler,David Kessler,Derek Richards,Elizabeth Littlewood,Erik Forsell,Fan Feng,Fang Wang,Gerhard Andersson,Gerhard Andersson,Heather D. Hadjistavropoulos,Heleen Christensen,Iony D. Ezawa,Isabella Choi,Isabelle M. Rosso,Isabelle M. Rosso,Jan Philipp Klein,Jason Shumake,Javier García-Campayo,Jeannette Milgrom,Jessica Smith,Jesus Montero-Marin,Jill M. Newby,Juana Bretón-López,Juana Bretón-López,Justine Schneider,Kristofer Vernmark,Lara Bücker,Lisa Sheeber,Lisanne Warmerdam,Louise Farrer,Manuel Heinrich,Marcus J.H. Huibers,Marcus J.H. Huibers,Marie Kivi,Martin Kraepelien,Nicholas R. Forand,Nicholas R. Forand,Nicky Pugh,Nils Lindefors,Ove Lintvedt,Pavle Zagorscak,Per Carlbring,Rachel Phillips,Robert Johansson,Ronald C. Kessler,Sally Brabyn,Sarah Perini,Scott L. Rauch,Simon Gilbody,Simon Gilbody,Steffen Moritz,Thomas Berger,Victor J M Pop,Viktor Kaldo,Viktor Kaldo,Viola Spek,Yvonne Forsell +90 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors conducted a systematic review and IPD network meta-analysis and estimated relative treatment effect sizes across different patient characteristics through IPD-network meta-regression, and found that both guided and unguided iCBT were associated with more effectiveness as measured by PHQ-9 scores than control treatments over the short term and the long term.
Journal ArticleDOI
ICBT in routine care: A descriptive analysis of successful clinics in five countries.
Nickolai Titov,Blake F. Dear,Olav Nielssen,Lauren G. Staples,Heather D. Hadjistavropoulos,Marcie Nugent,Kelly Adlam,Tine Nordgreen,Tine Nordgreen,Kristin Hogstad Bruvik,Anders Hovland,Arne Repål,Kim Mathiasen,Kim Mathiasen,Martin Kraepelien,Kerstin Blom,Kerstin Blom,Cecilia Svanborg,Nils Lindefors,Viktor Kaldo,Viktor Kaldo +20 more
TL;DR: It is shown that therapist-guided ICBT can be a valuable part of mental health services for anxiety and depression and rigorous governance to maintain a high standard of clinical care, and the measurement and reporting of outcomes.
Journal ArticleDOI
The Short Health Anxiety Inventory: A systematic review and meta-analysis
TL;DR: The SHAI is a psychometrically sound tool for assessing health anxiety across samples, and future studies are needed to assess test-retest reliability, incremental validity, and cut-off scores as well as use of the SHAI among diverse samples.
Journal ArticleDOI
Cognitive and behavioral responses to illness information: the role of health anxiety
TL;DR: Extending the cognitive-behavioural theory, health anxiety was found to be associated with decreased usage of positive somatic monitoring of symptoms, suggesting health anxiety may beassociated with a failure to engage in protective strategies.