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Kenneth M. Carpenter

Researcher at Columbia University

Publications -  63
Citations -  6847

Kenneth M. Carpenter is an academic researcher from Columbia University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Naltrexone & Cocaine dependence. The author has an hindex of 31, co-authored 62 publications receiving 5997 citations.

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Providing live supervision via teleconferencing improves acquisition of motivational interviewing skills after workshop attendance.

TL;DR: Teleconferencing Supervision may help facilitate the proficient use of MI community clinicians following workshop instruction and improve summary scores and therapist behavior frequency counts by post-training or by the 3 month follow-up, although some gains were not statistically significant.
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Simulation study of the effects of excluding early deaths on risk factor-mortality analyses in the presence of confounding due to occult disease: the example of body mass index.

TL;DR: Results suggest that under the conditions investigated, the method of excluding early deaths does not reliably or substantially reduce bias due to confounding introduced by occult disease.
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Attentional bias towards cocaine-related stimuli: relationship to treatment-seeking for cocaine dependence.

TL;DR: Although treatment seekers reported less experience with cocaine than nontreatment seekers, they exhibited increased response latency and made more errors when identifying the colors of cocaine-related words, relative to neutral words, whereas nont treatment seekers did not.
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Management of relapse in naltrexone maintenance for heroin dependence.

TL;DR: Critical determinants of lapses to opioid use during naltrexone maintenance for opioid dependence unblocked opioid use calls for immediate intervention, such as detoxification or switching to the partial agonist buprenorphine.
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The relationship between masculine gender role stress and psychological adjustment: A question of construct validity?

TL;DR: This paper investigated the validity of the masculine gender role stress construct and found that it is related to depression, hostility, and anxiety, but to the same degree for both men and women.