K
Karen M. Emmons
Researcher at Harvard University
Publications - 354
Citations - 21892
Karen M. Emmons is an academic researcher from Harvard University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Smoking cessation & Population. The author has an hindex of 75, co-authored 336 publications receiving 20366 citations. Previous affiliations of Karen M. Emmons include Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center & Miriam Hospital.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Prospective evaluation of the impact of stress, anxiety, and depression on household income among young women with early breast cancer from the Young and Strong trial.
Erin E. Cook,Erin E. Cook,Shoshana M. Rosenberg,Kathryn J. Ruddy,William T. Barry,Mary L. Greaney,Jennifer A. Ligibel,Kim Sprunck-Harrild,Michelle D. Holmes,Rulla M. Tamimi,Karen M. Emmons,Ann H. Partridge +11 more
TL;DR: Baseline stress, anxiety, and depression were not associated with household income changes for young women with breast cancer, however, lower baseline household income was associated with losing household income.
Journal ArticleDOI
Assessment of parents' smoking behaviors at a pediatric emergency department.
Judith D. DePue,Bhrett McCabe,Alessandra Kazura,Alessandra Kazura,Bruce M. Becker,George D. Papandonatos,Thomas H. Chun,Karen M. Emmons +7 more
TL;DR: Investigations showed that most parents in this setting are concerned about limiting their children's ETS exposure, but this concern alone appeared insufficient to motivate parents to quit smoking.
Journal ArticleDOI
Technology-enabled activation of skin cancer screening for hematopoietic cell transplantation survivors and their primary care providers (TEACH).
Saro H. Armenian,Lanie Lindenfeld,Aleksi Iukuridze,Meagan Echevarria,Samantha Bebel,Catherine Coleman,Ryotaro Nakamura,Farah Abdullah,Badri Modi,Kevin C. Oeffinger,Karen M. Emmons,Ashfaq A. Marghoob,Alan C. Geller +12 more
TL;DR: The proposed intervention will identify facilitators of and barriers to risk-based screening in this population and help reduce the burden of cancer-related morbidity after HCT and provide much-needed information regarding strategies to improve skin cancer detection in other high-risk cancer survivor populations.
Journal Article
Smoking control at the workplace: current status and emerging issues.
Journal ArticleDOI
Walking the talk on multi-level interventions: The power of parsimony
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that operational frameworks to identify which levels matter in which contexts, referred to as parsimony, could accelerate the field towards broader use of multi-level interventions (MLIs).