R
Rosemarie A. Martin
Researcher at Brown University
Publications - 97
Citations - 3050
Rosemarie A. Martin is an academic researcher from Brown University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Smoking cessation & Abstinence. The author has an hindex of 29, co-authored 88 publications receiving 2685 citations. Previous affiliations of Rosemarie A. Martin include Memorial Hospital of Rhode Island & Providence VA Medical Center.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Depression Among Cocaine Abusers in Treatment: Relation to Cocaine and Alcohol Use and Treatment Outcome
Richard A. Brown,Peter M. Monti,Mark G. Myers,Rosemarie A. Martin,Timothy R. Rivinus,Mary Ella Dubreuil,Damaris J. Rohsenow +6 more
TL;DR: The results highlight the relationship of depression to alcohol use among cocaine abusers and suggest a need for further studies of the association between depression and substance use disorders.
Journal ArticleDOI
Thorough skin examination for the early detection of melanoma
Martin A. Weinstock,Rosemarie A. Martin,Patricia Markham Risica,Marianne Berwick,Thomas M. Lasater,William Rakowski,Michael G. Goldstein,Catherine Dube +7 more
TL;DR: Only 9% performed a thorough skin examination (TSE) at least once every few months, although over half of the sample reported conducting skin self-examination "deliberately and systematically."
Journal ArticleDOI
Motivational enhancement and coping skills training for cocaine abusers: effects on substance use outcomes
Damaris J. Rohsenow,Damaris J. Rohsenow,Peter M. Monti,Peter M. Monti,Rosemarie A. Martin,Suzanne M. Colby,Mark G. Myers,Suzy B. Gulliver,Richard A. Brown,Timothy I. Mueller,Alan Gordon,David B. Abrams +11 more
TL;DR: Motivational enhancement treatment is more beneficial for patients with lower initial motivation than for Patients with high initial motivation, and group coping-skills training reduced cocaine and alcohol use and reduced alcohol relapses, in contrast to results with lengthier individual CST.
Journal ArticleDOI
Forced smoking abstinence: not enough for smoking cessation.
Jennifer G. Clarke,Lynda A. R. Stein,Rosemarie A. Martin,Stephen A. Martin,Donna R. Parker,Donna R. Parker,Cheryl E. Lopes,Arthur R. McGovern,Rachel Simon,Mary B. Roberts,Mary B. Roberts,Peter Friedman,Beth C. Bock +12 more
TL;DR: A behavioral intervention provided prior to release greatly improves cotinine-confirmed smoking cessation in the community and forced tobacco abstinence alone during incarceration has little impact on postrelease smoking status.
Journal ArticleDOI
Brief coping skills treatment for cocaine abuse : substance use outcomes at three months
Peter M. Monti,Damaris J. Rohsenow,Elizabeth Michalec,Rosemarie A. Martin,David B. Abrams,David B. Abrams +5 more
TL;DR: Clients who received CST had significantly fewer cocaine use days and the length of their longest binge was significantly shorter during the 3-month follow-up period compared to clients in the control condition.