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Todd Jackson

Researcher at University of Macau

Publications -  207
Citations -  5136

Todd Jackson is an academic researcher from University of Macau. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Pain catastrophizing. The author has an hindex of 39, co-authored 170 publications receiving 3854 citations. Previous affiliations of Todd Jackson include London Health Sciences Centre & University of Wisconsin–Superior.

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Self-efficacy and chronic pain outcomes: a meta-analytic review.

TL;DR: Meta-analysis indicated that SE has significant overall associations with impairment, affective distress, and pain severity within chronic pain samples and identified several factors that contribute to variability in effect sizes.
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The Negative Physical Self Scale: Initial development and validation in samples of Chinese adolescents and young adults

TL;DR: Because Chinese adolescents and young adults expressed relatively more concerns about General Appearance, Shortness, and Facial Appearance than about Fatness, the NPS may have greater utility for assessing body image disturbances in China than existing measures that focus exclusively on general body satisfaction and body size/weight.
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Prevalence and sociodemographic correlates of eating disorder endorsements among adolescents and young adults from China.

TL;DR: Findings extend past prevalence research and highlight specific sociodemographic correlates of eating pathology and body dissatisfaction among Chinese adolescents and young adults.
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The impact of threatening information about pain on coping and pain tolerance.

TL;DR: It is suggested that pain appraised as threatening contributes to a specific pattern of coping responses associated with a reduced capacity to bear pain.
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Relationships between perceived close social support and health practices within community samples of American women and men.

TL;DR: It is suggested that high levels of social support from one's close social network contribute independently to specific health practices for women, but not for men, and point to the importance of both between- and within-gender assessment of health behavior.