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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 ArticleDOI

Teaching Consultation-Liaison Psychotherapy: Assessment of Adaptation to Medical and Surgical Illness

TL;DR: The teaching model awaits empirical validation as a tool that enhances teaching and patient care outcomes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Attachment Relationships as Determinants of Physical Health.

TL;DR: A survey of recent evidence that attachment insecurity has the potential to impair physical health throughout the lifespan can be found in this paper , where a range of mechanisms including disturbances in arousal and recovery within physiological systems that respond to stress, physiological links between the mediators of social relationships, stress, and immunity, links between relationship style and various health behaviors, and disease risk factors that serve as external regulators of dysphoric affect such as nicotine and alcohol.
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An Internet Resource for Self-Assessment of Mental Health and Health Behavior: Development and Implementation of the Self-Assessment Kiosk.

TL;DR: The value of the Self-Assessment Kiosk to users and the feasibility of providing this resource are supported by the steady accumulation of new users over time, which can be interrogated to understand the relationships between health variables.
Book

Love, Fear, and Health: How Our Attachments to Others Shape Health and Health Care

TL;DR: Important applications to the healthcare field, it opens up topics for further research, and reads quickly and effortlessly because of its lucid prose, engaging author selfdisclosures, and efficiently presented, highly instructive case examples.
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The prevalence and clinical correlates of adverse childhood experiences in a cross-sectional study of primary care patients with cardiometabolic disease or risk factors.

TL;DR: ACEs are common among patients at cardiometabolic risk and are related to quality of life, psychological factors that influence cardiometric outcomes and behavior change goals, and ACEs exposure was not related to preferred resources for behavior change.