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A global measure of perceived stress.

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TLDR
The Perceived Stress Scale showed adequate reliability and, as predicted, was correlated with life-event scores, depressive and physical symptomatology, utilization of health services, social anxiety, and smoking-reduction maintenance and was a better predictor of the outcome in question than were life- event scores.
Abstract
This paper presents evidence from three samples, two of college students and one of participants in a community smoking-cessation program, for the reliability and validity of a 14-item instrument, the Perceived Stress Scale (PSS), designed to measure the degree to which situations in one's life are appraised as stressful. The PSS showed adequate reliability and, as predicted, was correlated with life-event scores, depressive and physical symptomatology, utilization of health services, social anxiety, and smoking-reduction maintenance. In all comparisons, the PSS was a better predictor of the outcome in question than were life-event scores. When compared to a depressive symptomatology scale, the PSS was found to measure a different and independently predictive construct. Additional data indicate adequate reliability and validity of a four-item version of the PSS for telephone interviews. The PSS is suggested for examining the role of nonspecific appraised stress in the etiology of disease and behavioral disorders and as an outcome measure of experienced levels of stress.

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Increased salivary cortisol reliably induced by a protein-rich midday meal.

TL;DR: The measurement of free cortisol in saliva provides a psychologically stress-free and reliable technique to assess the cortisol response to a standard protein-rich meal, ie, a physiological challenge to the HPA axis in men and women that could be investigated in naturalistic settings outside the laboratory.

Conditions and effects of improving emotional competence in adulthood

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated whether it is possible to increase emotional competence in adulthood, and whether this improvement results in better mental, physical, and social adjustment; and whether these benefits are accompanied by a reduction in stress-hormone secretion.
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The impact of abbreviated progressive muscle relaxation on salivary cortisol.

TL;DR: Results indicated that a brief relaxation exercise led to experimental subjects having significantly lower levels of post-intervention heart rate, state anxiety, perceived stress, and salivary cortisol than control subjects, as well as increased levels of self-report levels of relaxation.
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The association between dispositional mindfulness, psychological well-being, and perceived health in a Swedish population-based sample

TL;DR: Results suggest that dispositional mindfulness might buffer against the negative influence of perceived stress on psychological well-being, and give additional support for the use of mindfulness training as a way of improving psychological functioning among people experiencing stress.
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Does Money Matter? The Effects of Cash Transfers on Child Development in Rural Ecuador

TL;DR: The cash transfer program for poor mothers in rural Ecuador had positive, although modest, effects on the physical, cognitive, and socioemotional development of the poorest children in the authors' sample.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The CES-D Scale: A Self-Report Depression Scale for Research in the General Population

TL;DR: The CES-D scale as discussed by the authors is a short self-report scale designed to measure depressive symptomatology in the general population, which has been used in household interview surveys and in psychiatric settings.
Journal ArticleDOI

The stress process.

TL;DR: This study takes involuntary job disruptions as illustrating life events and shows how they adversely affect enduring role strains, economic strains in particular, which erode positive concepts of self, such as self-esteem and mastery.