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Kyle Kercher

Researcher at Case Western Reserve University

Publications -  18
Citations -  1159

Kyle Kercher is an academic researcher from Case Western Reserve University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Subjective well-being & Health care. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 16 publications receiving 1086 citations. Previous affiliations of Kyle Kercher include Veterans Health Administration.

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Assessing Subjective Well-Being in the Old-Old The PANAS as a Measure of Orthogonal Dimensions of Positive and Negative Affect

TL;DR: A review of past research reveals apparent gaps in many current measures of positive affect (PA) and negative affect (NA) including the Bradburn (1969) Affect Balance subscales popular among gerontologists and other social scientists as discussed by the authors.
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Caregiver Burden and Generic Well-Being: Opposite Sides of the Same Coin?.

TL;DR: Compared commonly used dimensions of burden with parallel dimensions of well-being, both as outcome variables and as predictors of other outcomes, in a sample of caregivers suggest that burden may tap a unique domain of caregiving outcomes that is not represented by more objective indicators of these effects.
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Coping among older-adult, long-term cancer survivors

TL;DR: The personal and illness/treatment characteristics of survivors are identified that are significantly associated with the use of specific coping styles: planning, acceptance, venting, denial and seeking social support, and the mediating role that these forms of coping play in terms of psychological distress: anxiety, depression and cancer‐related worries.
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The personal and social context of planning for end-of-life care.

TL;DR: To examine the potential facilitators of or deterrents to end‐of‐life planning for community‐dwelling older adults, including personal and social influences, including health‐related and sociodemographic influences.
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Long-term impact of preventive proactivity on quality of life of the old-old.

TL;DR: The results lend support to the long-term preventive value of health-promoting proactivity spontaneously engaged in by old-old persons proposed in the framework of the PCP model.