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Lauri A. Pasch

Researcher at University of California, San Francisco

Publications -  105
Citations -  4572

Lauri A. Pasch is an academic researcher from University of California, San Francisco. The author has contributed to research in topics: Polycystic ovary & Infertility. The author has an hindex of 36, co-authored 96 publications receiving 3937 citations. Previous affiliations of Lauri A. Pasch include University of San Francisco & University of California.

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Social support, conflict, and the development of marital dysfunction.

TL;DR: In this article, newly married couples participated in two interaction tasks: a problem-solving task in which spouses discussed a marital conflict and a social support task where spouses discussed personal, non-marital difficulties.
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Perceived Discrimination, Perceived Stress, and Mental and Physical Health Among Mexican-Origin Adults

TL;DR: This paper provided a test of the minority status stress model by examining whether perceived discrimination would directly affect health outcomes even when perceived stress was taken into account, and found that perceived stress did not directly affect outcomes.
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Perceived racial/ethnic discrimination, posttraumatic stress symptoms, and health risk behaviors among Mexican American adolescents.

TL;DR: Support is provided for the notion of race-based traumatic stress, specifically, that perceived discrimination may be traumatizing for Mexican American adolescents and Counseling psychologists and counselors in schools and community settings should assess MexicanAmerican adolescents for the effects of discrimination.
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Costs of infertility treatment: results from an 18-month prospective cohort study

TL;DR: Although individual patient costs vary, these cost estimates developed from actual patient treatment experiences may provide patients with realistic estimates to consider when initiating infertility treatment.
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Social support, problem solving, and the longitudinal course of newlywed marriage.

TL;DR: These findings corroborate models that prioritize empathy, validation, and caring as key elements in the development of intimacy and suggest that deficits in these domains foreshadow deterioration in problem solving and conflict management.