J
Jonathan Hunter
Researcher at University of Toronto
Publications - 55
Citations - 5146
Jonathan Hunter is an academic researcher from University of Toronto. The author has contributed to research in topics: Attachment theory & Health care. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 51 publications receiving 4279 citations. Previous affiliations of Jonathan Hunter include Mount Sinai Hospital, Toronto & Ryerson University.
Papers
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Journal Article
The immediate psychological and occupational impact of the 2003 SARS outbreak in a teaching hospital
Robert G. Maunder,Jonathan Hunter,Leslie Vincent,Jocelyn Bennett,Nathalie Peladeau,Molyn Leszcz,Joel Sadavoy,Lieve M. Verhaeghe,Rosalie Steinberg,Tony Mazzulli +9 more
TL;DR: The psychological and occupational impact of this event within a large hospital in the first 4 weeks of the SARS outbreak and the subsequent administrative and mental health response is described.
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Long-term psychological and occupational effects of providing hospital healthcare during SARS outbreak.
Robert G. Maunder,William J. Lancee,Kenneth E. Balderson,Jocelyn Bennett,Bjug Borgundvaag,Susan E. Evans,Christopher M.B. Fernandes,David S. Goldbloom,Mona Gupta,Jonathan Hunter,Linda McGillis Hall,Lynn M. Nagle,Clare Pain,Sonia S. Peczeniuk,Glenna Raymond,Nancy Read,Sean B. Rourke,Rosalie Steinberg,Thomas E. Stewart,Susan VanDeVelde-Coke,Georgina G. Veldhorst,Donald Wasylenki +21 more
TL;DR: Hospital workers in hospitals affected by SARS experience increased psychological stress 1–2 years after the outbreak, according to a report from the World Health Organization.
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The Effect of Group Psychosocial Support on Survival in Metastatic Breast Cancer
Pamela J. Goodwin,Molyn Leszcz,Marguerite Ennis,Jan Koopmans,Leslie Vincent,Helaine Guther,Elaine Drysdale,Marilyn Hundleby,Harvey Max Chochinov,Margaret Navarro,Michael Speca,Jonathan Hunter +11 more
TL;DR: Supportive-expressive group therapy does not prolong survival in women with metastatic breast cancer, but it improves mood and the perception of pain, particularly in women who are initially more distressed.
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Attachment and psychosomatic medicine: developmental contributions to stress and disease.
TL;DR: Evidence supports the prediction from attachment theory that the benefits of social support derive more from attachment relationships than nonattachment relationships and can be organized into a model that describe attachment insecurity leading to disease risk through three mechanisms.
Journal ArticleDOI
Factors associated with the psychological impact of severe acute respiratory syndrome on nurses and other hospital workers in Toronto.
Robert G. Maunder,William J. Lancee,Sean B. Rourke,Jonathan Hunter,David S. Goldbloom,Ken Balderson,Patricia Petryshen,Rosalie Steinberg,Donald Wasylenki,David Koh,Calvin S. L. Fones +10 more
TL;DR: The data suggest that the targets of intervention should include job stress, social isolation, and health fear, which are found in nurses and healthcare workers having contact with patients with severe acute respiratory syndrome.