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Scott D. Siegel
Researcher at Christiana Care Health System
Publications - 54
Citations - 2981
Scott D. Siegel is an academic researcher from Christiana Care Health System. The author has contributed to research in topics: Breast cancer & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 41 publications receiving 2347 citations. Previous affiliations of Scott D. Siegel include University of Miami.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Stress and Health: Psychological, Behavioral, and Biological Determinants
TL;DR: The relationship between psychosocial stressors and disease is affected by the nature, number, and persistence of the stressors as well as by the individual's biological vulnerability.
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A randomized clinical trial of group-based cognitive-behavioral stress management in localized prostate cancer: development of stress management skills improves quality of life and benefit finding.
Frank J. Penedo,Frank J. Penedo,Ivan Molton,Jason R. Dahn,Biing Jiun Shen,Dave Kinsinger,Lara Traeger,Scott D. Siegel,Neil Schneiderman,Neil Schneiderman,Michael H. Antoni +10 more
TL;DR: Results support the use of group-based cognitive-behavioral interventions in promoting QoL and BF in this population of men recovering from treatment for localized prostate cancer.
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Fear of cancer recurrence: a theoretical review and its relevance for clinical presentation and management
TL;DR: An emerging literature demonstrates that fear of cancer recurrence (FCR) is a problematic long‐term and late effect for cancer survivors, and this article provides a necessary synthesis of the extant research evidence and theory.
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Applying latent growth curve modeling to the investigation of individual differences in cardiovascular recovery from stress.
TL;DR: An introduction to latent growth curve (LGC) modeling, a modern method for analyzing data resulting from change processes such as cardiovascular recovery from stress, yields an understanding of the processes and predictors of change that is not attainable through traditional statistical methods.
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Promoting recovery of sexual functioning after radical prostatectomy with group-based stress management: The role of interpersonal sensitivity
Ivan R. Molton,Scott D. Siegel,Frank J. Penedo,Frank J. Penedo,Jason R. Dahn,David P. Kinsinger,Lara Traeger,Charles S. Carver,Biing Jiun Shen,Mahendra Kumar,Neil Schneiderman,Neil Schneiderman,Michael H. Antoni,Michael H. Antoni +13 more
TL;DR: It is found that the CBSM intervention was effective in promoting sexual recovery in all participants, and this effect was moderated by interpersonal sensitivity, such that individuals with higher levels of interpersonal sensitivity made larger improvements in sexual functioning in response to CBSM.