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Tamar Mendelson

Researcher at Johns Hopkins University

Publications -  118
Citations -  4708

Tamar Mendelson is an academic researcher from Johns Hopkins University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mental health & Psychological intervention. The author has an hindex of 32, co-authored 107 publications receiving 3871 citations. Previous affiliations of Tamar Mendelson include Duke University & University of North Carolina at Greensboro.

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Feasibility and preliminary outcomes of a school-based mindfulness intervention for urban youth

TL;DR: Findings suggest the intervention was attractive to students, teachers, and school administrators and that it had a positive impact on problematic responses to stress including rumination, intrusive thoughts, and emotional arousal.
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Dialectical Behavior Therapy for Depressed Older Adults: A Randomized Pilot Study

TL;DR: Results from this pilot study suggest that DBT skills training and telephone coaching may offer promise to effectively augment the effects of antidepressant medication in depressed older adults.
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Childhood emotional invalidation and adult psychological distress: the mediating role of emotional inhibition

TL;DR: Support is found for a model in which the relation between recollected negative emotion socialization in childhood and adult psychological distress was fully mediated by a style of inhibiting emotional experience and expression.
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Risks and Predictors of Readmission for a Mental Disorder During the Postpartum Period

TL;DR: Mothers withmental disorders have lower readmission rates compared with women with mental disorders who do not have children, and women with a history of bipolar affective disorder are at particular risk of postpartum psychiatric readmissions.
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Prevention of Postpartum Depression in Low-Income Women: Development of the Mamás y Bebés/Mothers and Babies Course☆

TL;DR: The intervention was well received by the participants and implementation of a randomized trial appeared quite feasible as indicated by the follow-up rate of 91% at 12 months, and Implications for the continuing development of preventive interventions for perinatal depression are discussed.