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Nickeisha Clarke

Researcher at Rutgers University

Publications -  6
Citations -  195

Nickeisha Clarke is an academic researcher from Rutgers University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Brief intervention & Motivational interviewing. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 6 publications receiving 165 citations.

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When less is more and more is less in brief motivational interventions: characteristics of intervention content and their associations with drinking outcomes.

TL;DR: Findings point to the importance of strategically designing BMIs to maximize their impact on drinking outcomes in college students by examining variation in breadth of BMI content, the extent to which content was personalized to participants, and the interaction between breadth and personalization in relation to treatment outcomes.
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Project INTEGRATE: An integrative study of brief alcohol interventions for college students.

TL;DR: An overview of a study that synthesizes multiple, independently collected alcohol intervention studies for college students into a single, multisite longitudinal data set, with the overall goal of answering research questions that are difficult to address in individual studies such as moderation analysis.
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Associations Between Alcohol Use and Alcohol-Related Negative Consequences Among Black and White College Men and Women

TL;DR: A statistically significant interaction between gender and alcohol use is found in predicting alcohol problems, suggesting that, at higher levels of drinking, the risk for women to experience alcohol problems was significantly greater than that for men.
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Treatment outcomes of a combined cognitive behavior therapy and pharmacotherapy for a sample of women with and without substance abuse histories on an acute psychiatric unit: do therapeutic alliance and motivation matter?

TL;DR: Preliminary support is provided for the efficacy of a combined CBT and pharmacotherapy program for women with psychiatric diagnoses on a women-only acute inpatient unit, and for pre-treatment motivation and therapeutic alliance as important correlates of better treatment outcomes.
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The association between protective behavioral strategies and alcohol-related problems: An examination of race and gender differences among college drinkers.

TL;DR: Modation analyses indicated that PBS were more protective for women than men against experiencing alcohol-related problems, and implementing PBS may be beneficial for all college students.