R
Ryon C. McDermott
Researcher at University of South Alabama
Publications - 88
Citations - 1479
Ryon C. McDermott is an academic researcher from University of South Alabama. The author has contributed to research in topics: Masculinity & Mental health. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 74 publications receiving 886 citations. Previous affiliations of Ryon C. McDermott include Austin Peay State University & University of Michigan.
Papers
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Anxiety and depression across gender and sexual minorities: Implications for transgender, gender nonconforming, pansexual, demisexual, asexual, queer, and questioning individuals.
TL;DR: This paper found that sexual and gender minorities report notably poorer outcomes on measures of mental health when compared with cisgender/heterosexual individuals, but few studies have taken the time to examine differences between cisgender and heteronormative individuals.
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Self-Stigma, Mental Health Literacy, and Attitudes Toward Seeking Psychological Help
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Development and evaluation of the Expressions of Moral Injury Scale—Military Version
Joseph M. Currier,Jacob K. Farnsworth,Kent D. Drescher,Ryon C. McDermott,Brook M. Sims,David L. Albright +5 more
TL;DR: The EMIS-M provides a face valid, psychometrically validated tool for assessing expressions of apparent MI subtypes in research and clinical settings and supports innovation for clinicians to tailor evidence-based treatments and/or develop novel approaches for addressing MI in their work.
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College Men's Intimate Partner Violence Attitudes: Contributions of Adult Attachment and Gender Role Stress
TL;DR: Results suggest that aspects of adult attachment insecurity are associated with tendencies to experience stress from violations of rigidly internalized traditional male role norms, which, in turn, areassociated with acceptance of IPV.
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Mental Health, Self-Stigma, and Help-Seeking Intentions Among Emerging Adults An Attachment Perspective
TL;DR: In this article, an attachment theory-driven model was proposed to predict intentions to seek counseling with a college student sample (N = 1,682) and structural equation modeling revealed that attachment anxiety, but not attachment avoidance, directly and positively predicted intention to seek counselling.