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Patrick A. Palmieri

Researcher at Summa Health System

Publications -  99
Citations -  6206

Patrick A. Palmieri is an academic researcher from Summa Health System. The author has contributed to research in topics: Poison control & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 38, co-authored 83 publications receiving 5554 citations. Previous affiliations of Patrick A. Palmieri include Kent State University & University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign.

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Refining our Understanding of Traumatic Growth in the Face of Terrorism: Moving from Meaning Cognitions to Doing what is Meaningful

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated whether psychological distress is reduced or increased by posttraumatic growth in other trauma contexts and found that individuals were deeply involved in translating growth cognitions to growth actions in their research on the forced disengagement of settlers from Gaza.
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Development and Validation of a Brief Self-Report Measure of Trauma Exposure: The Trauma History Screen

TL;DR: The psychometric properties of the THS appear to be comparable or better than longer and more complex measures of trauma exposure, and it provides detailed information about PPD events.
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The (un)reasonableness of reporting: antecedents and consequences of reporting sexual harassment.

TL;DR: It is argued that organizational responses to reports (i.e., organizational remedies, organizational minimization, and retaliation) as well as procedural satisfaction can account for these negative effects of reporting.
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Evidence for a unique PTSD construct represented by PTSD's D1-D3 symptoms

TL;DR: Recruitment of 252 women victims of domestic violence and confirmatory factor analytic findings demonstrated that separating the three PTSD symptoms into a separate factor significantly enhanced model fit for the Emotional Numbing and Dysphoria models.
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Contrasting patterns of brain activity in anxious apprehension and anxious arousal.

TL;DR: Compared the regional brain activity of groups of anxious apprehension and anxious arousal participants, selected on the basis of self-report measures previously shown to be psychometrically distinct from each other and from a specific measure of depression, to provide further support for contrasting patterns of brain activity in distinct types of anxiety.