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Jeong Yeob Han

Researcher at University of Georgia

Publications -  44
Citations -  2012

Jeong Yeob Han is an academic researcher from University of Georgia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Breast cancer & eHealth. The author has an hindex of 24, co-authored 40 publications receiving 1768 citations. Previous affiliations of Jeong Yeob Han include University of Wisconsin-Madison.

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The roles of social support and coping strategies in predicting breast cancer patients' emotional well-being: testing mediation and moderation models.

TL;DR: The data from the current study were more consistent with the mediation model than the moderation model, which is a moderation model where the level of social support influences choices of coping strategies between self-blame and positive reframing.
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Cancer talk on twitter: community structure and information sources in breast and prostate cancer social networks.

TL;DR: It is suggested that users who populated the persistent-across-time core cancer communities created dense clusters, an indication of taking advantage of the technology to form relationships with one another in ways that traditional one-to-many communication technologies cannot support.
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The process and effect of supportive message expression and reception in online breast cancer support groups.

TL;DR: The dynamic interplay between emotional support giving and receiving in CMSS groups for breast cancer patients is examined to better understand the process and effect of social support exchanges within computer‐mediated social support groups.
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Effects of using online narrative and didactic information on healthcare participation for breast cancer patients

TL;DR: Findings are consistent with and advance prior research on online learning processes and outcomes for breast cancer patients: benefits accrue with using a variety of online learning tools; and African Americans use and benefit more from online narrative and didactic information than do Caucasians.
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Empathic Exchanges in Online Cancer Support Groups: Distinguishing Message Expression and Reception Effects

TL;DR: The finding supports the buffering hypothesis that empathic expression provides a salutary effect for patients who experienced a higher degree of concern associated with their cancer diagnosis and follow-up treatments.