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Rona Moss-Morris

Researcher at King's College London

Publications -  282
Citations -  16517

Rona Moss-Morris is an academic researcher from King's College London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Anxiety & Randomized controlled trial. The author has an hindex of 59, co-authored 262 publications receiving 14111 citations. Previous affiliations of Rona Moss-Morris include University of Southampton & Guy's Hospital.

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Current issues and new directions in Psychology and Health: contributions to translational research.

TL;DR: Looking back over the past year of submissions to Psychology and Health, it is clear that health psychology research continues to thrive and grow – indeed, it looks as if another record will be set this year for the numbers of papers submitted to the journal.
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Disparities in access to mobile devices and e-health literacy among breast cancer survivors

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explored the relationship between technology access and e-health literacy with sociodemographic variables such as age, social deprivation, and education and found that women who were younger, had higher levels of education and who were from less deprived areas were more likely to have access to either device.
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Persistent physical symptoms reduction intervention: a system change and evaluation in secondary care (PRINCE secondary) - a CBT-based transdiagnostic approach: study protocol for a randomised controlled trial

TL;DR: This trial will provide a powered evaluation of the efficacy and cost-effectiveness of a transdiagnostic CBT approach versus SMC for patients with PPS and provide valuable information about potential healthcare pathways for patientswith PPS within the National Health Service (NHS).
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An attention and interpretation bias for illness-specific information in chronic fatigue syndrome

TL;DR: People with CFS have illness-specific biases which may play a part in maintaining symptoms by reinforcing unhelpful illness beliefs and behaviours and Enhancing adaptive processing, such as positive interpretation biases and more flexible attention allocation, may provide beneficial intervention targets.
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Development and Feasibility of an Evidence-Based Patient Education Program for Managing Fatigue in Multiple Sclerosis: The "Fatigue Management in MS" Program (FatiMa)

TL;DR: Preliminary results suggest that this program is a feasible cognitive-behavioral group training program that may improve coping self-efficacy and has the potential to subsequently reduce fatigue.