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Meg Gerrard

Researcher at University of Connecticut

Publications -  176
Citations -  18640

Meg Gerrard is an academic researcher from University of Connecticut. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Poison control. The author has an hindex of 74, co-authored 171 publications receiving 17126 citations. Previous affiliations of Meg Gerrard include Albert Einstein College of Medicine & Iowa State University.

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Meta-analysis of the relationship between risk perception and health behavior: the example of vaccination.

TL;DR: The consistent relationships between risk perceptions and behavior, larger than suggested by prior meta-analyses, suggest that risk perceptions are rightly placed as core concepts in theories of health behavior.
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Perceived Discrimination and the Adjustment of African American Youths: A Five-Year Longitudinal Analysis With Contextual Moderation Effects

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the link between perceived racial discrimination and later conduct problems and depressive symptoms among 714 African American adolescents who were 10-12 years old at recruitment.
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A dual-process approach to health risk decision making: The prototype willingness model

TL;DR: The prototype willingness model of adolescent decision making as mentioned in this paper is a dual-process model designed specifically to address non-intentional but volitional adolescent risk behavior, and it has been applied to the study of adolescent risk behaviors.
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Reasoned action and social reaction: Willingness and intention as independent predictors of health risk.

TL;DR: Gibbons et al. as mentioned in this paper proposed the prototype/willingness (P/W) model to predict adolescents' smoking behavior and found that the model added significantly to behavioral expectation in predicting smoking behavior.
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Predicting young adults' health risk behavior.

TL;DR: Results indicated that prototype perception was related to risk behavior in both a reactive and a prospective manner, which meant that perceptions changed as a function of change in behavior, and perceptions predicted those behavior changes as well.