R
Robert Gallop
Researcher at West Chester University of Pennsylvania
Publications - 266
Citations - 20875
Robert Gallop is an academic researcher from West Chester University of Pennsylvania. The author has contributed to research in topics: Randomized controlled trial & Cognitive therapy. The author has an hindex of 66, co-authored 244 publications receiving 18743 citations. Previous affiliations of Robert Gallop include University of Ottawa & University of Pennsylvania.
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Journal ArticleDOI
African American race, obesity, and blood product transfusion are risk factors for acute kidney injury in critically ill trauma patients.
Michael G.S. Shashaty,Nuala J. Meyer,A. Russell Localio,Robert Gallop,Scarlett L. Bellamy,Daniel N. Holena,Paul N. Lanken,Sandra Kaplan,Dilek Yarar,Steven M. Kawut,Harold I. Feldman,Jason D. Christie +11 more
TL;DR: The findings of African American race, obesity, and blood product administration as independent risk factors for AKI deserve further study to elucidate underlying mechanisms.
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Wide Variation in Clinicians' Assessment of New York Heart Association/World Health Organization Functional Class in Patients With Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension
Darren B. Taichman,Michael D. McGoon,Michael O. Harhay,Chris Archer-Chicko,J.S. Sager,Meena Murugappan,Murali M. Chakinali,Harold I. Palevsky,Robert Gallop +8 more
TL;DR: Despite the wide use of the New York Heart Association/World Health Organization functional class in clinical care and as a research tool, interrater agreement may be inadequate.
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Long-Term Effects of Brief Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for Psychosis:
TL;DR: A more sophisticated survival analysis was used to take previous hospitalization and length of the current hospitalization into account and showed that survival curves continued to diverge in the 5- to 12-month postdischarge period after adjusting for differences in the 0 to 4 month period.
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Multilevel modeling of longitudinal data for psychotherapy researchers: II. The complexities.
TL;DR: The objective of this article is to focus on complexities associated with the MLM for longitudinal data analysis in psychotherapy research, which may result in proper use or misuse of the modeling structure.
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The alliance in motivational enhancement therapy and counseling as usual for substance use problems.
Paul Crits-Christoph,Robert Gallop,Christina M. Temes,George E. Woody,Samuel A. Ball,Steve Martino,Kathleen M. Carroll +6 more
TL;DR: The between-therapists component of the alliance, but not the within-therapist component, was significantly associated with self-reported days of primary substance use during the follow-up period from Week 4 to Week 16.