P
Ping Li
Researcher at Shandong University
Publications - 46
Citations - 888
Ping Li is an academic researcher from Shandong University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Psychological resilience. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 34 publications receiving 569 citations. Previous affiliations of Ping Li include Karolinska University Hospital.
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Correlates of psychological distress, burnout, and resilience among Chinese female nurses
TL;DR: Interventions that attend to resilience training may be the focus for future clinical and research endeavors after mediation analysis revealed that resilience could partially mediate the relationship between the dimensions of emotional exhaustion, depersonalization, and psychological distress of female nurses.
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The mediating role of resilience in the relationship between social support and posttraumatic growth among colorectal cancer survivors with permanent intestinal ostomies: A structural equation model analysis.
TL;DR: Moderate to high PTG was found in CRC survivors with permanent intestinal ostomies and improving social support and resilience might be scientific intervention strategies for promoting PTG among CRC survivors.
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Relationship between prenatal maternal stress and sleep quality in Chinese pregnant women: the mediation effect of resilience
TL;DR: The risk factor for disturbed sleep was pregnancy-specific stress; however, the protective factor for sleep quality was resilience, which could provide scientific evidence for the development of intervention strategies with which to improve sleep quality in pregnant women.
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Telomere dysfunction induced by chemotherapeutic agents and radiation in normal human cells.
TL;DR: Treatment of normal human T lymphocytes and fibroblasts with chemotherapeutic agents doxorubicin (DOX) or etoposide (VP16) led to significant shortening of telomeres, down-regulation of telomerase activity, and diminished expression of telomersase reverse transcriptase (hTERT) and the telomere binding proteins TPP1 and POT1.
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Associations of Perceived Stress, Resilience and Social Support with Sleep Disturbance Among Community‐dwelling Adults
TL;DR: Given the close relationship between sleep disturbance and psychosocial correlates, the development of effective intervention programmes to improve sleep quality in this population of Chinese community-dwelling adults should be considered.