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Renee Pepin

Researcher at Dartmouth College

Publications -  28
Citations -  614

Renee Pepin is an academic researcher from Dartmouth College. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mental health & Psychological intervention. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 26 publications receiving 483 citations. Previous affiliations of Renee Pepin include Dartmouth–Hitchcock Medical Center & University of New Mexico.

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Intrinsic and extrinsic barriers to mental health care among community-dwelling younger and older adults

TL;DR: Results indicated that younger adults perceived fear of psychotherapy, belief about inability to find a psychotherapist, and insurance concerns to be greater barriers than older adults, providing further evidence that stigma about receiving mental health services is not a primary barrier among younger or older adults.
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Does One Size Fit All? What We Can and Can't Learn From a Meta-analysis of Housing Models for Persons With Mental Illness

TL;DR: The meta-analysis provides quantitative evidence that compared with nonmodel housing, housing models contribute to stable housing and other favorable outcomes and support the theory that different housing models achieve different outcomes for different subgroups.
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Dementia grief: A theoretical model of a unique grief experience.

TL;DR: The Dementia Grief Model explicates an iterative grief process involving three states—separation, liminality, and re-emergence—each with a dynamic mechanism that facilitates or hinders movement through the dementia grief process.
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One Year Impact on Social Connectedness for Homebound Older Adults: Randomized Controlled Trial of Tele-delivered Behavioral Activation Versus Tele-delivered Friendly Visits.

TL;DR: A short-time, lay-coach-facilitated, videoconferenced, short-term behavioral activation Tele-BA intervention for improving social connectedness among homebound older adults holds promise for scalability in programs that already serve homebound elderly adults.
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Residual Effects of Restless Sleep over Depressive Symptoms on Chronic Medical Conditions: Race by Gender Differences

TL;DR: Race by gender heterogeneity in the residual effect of restless sleep over depressive symptoms on CMC over 25 years suggests that comorbid poor sleep and depressive symptoms differently contribute to development of multi-morbidity among subpopulations based on the intersection of race and gender.