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Jennie Ponsford

Researcher at Monash University, Clayton campus

Publications -  443
Citations -  21759

Jennie Ponsford is an academic researcher from Monash University, Clayton campus. The author has contributed to research in topics: Traumatic brain injury & Poison control. The author has an hindex of 73, co-authored 393 publications receiving 18379 citations. Previous affiliations of Jennie Ponsford include Monash University & Maastricht University.

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Changes in self-reported pre- to postinjury coping styles in the first 3 years after traumatic brain injury and the effects on psychosocial and emotional functioning and quality of life.

TL;DR: The findings support identification of individuals at risk of relying on nonproductive coping and poorer psychosocial outcome following TBI and emphasize the need to implement timely interventions to facilitate productive coping and reduce the use of non productive coping in order to maximize favorable long-term psychossocial outcome.
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Traumatic injury and perceived injustice: Fault attributions matter in a “no-fault” compensation state

TL;DR: The health impacts of injury, emotional distress related to pain (catastrophizing), and the perceived impact of pain on activity (pain self-efficacy), had stronger associations with perceptions of injustice than either injury or pain severity.
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Impact of apolipoprotein gene on cognitive impairment and recovery after traumatic brain injury.

TL;DR: This study investigated whether presence of the e4 allele in patients with TBI results in greater impairments of memory, attention, executive function, and functional outcome 3, 6, and 12 months postinjury, and in slower recovery, than in patients without the e3 allele and uninjured controls.
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Factors associated with sexuality following traumatic brain injury.

TL;DR: Therapeutic interventions for sexuality need to focus on depression where indicated and self-esteem and address specific barriers to social participation and opportunities for sexual contact in individuals who are less independent in ADL.
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Cognitive remediation in schizophrenia: A methodological appraisal of systematic reviews and meta-analyses

TL;DR: Most systematic reviews and meta-analyses regarding CR for schizophrenia shared strengths and fell within a 'medium' level of methodological quality, but there were consistent areas of potential weakness that were not addressed by most reviews.