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A Systematic Review of Resilience in the Physically Ill

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TLDR
Social support was highly predictive of, and associated with, resilience, and Coping strategies such as positive cognitive appraisal, spirituality, active coping, and mastery were also associated with resilience.
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This article is published in Psychosomatics.The article was published on 2011-05-01. It has received 346 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Mental health & Coping (psychology).

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Citations
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The Role of Psychosocial Processes in the Development and Maintenance of Chronic Pain.

TL;DR: Evidence that psychosocial variables play key roles in conferring risk for the development of pain, in shaping long-term pain-related adjustment, and in modulating pain treatment outcomes is described.
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A conceptual framework for the neurobiological study of resilience

TL;DR: This work proposes a unified theoretical framework for the neuroscientific study of general resilience mechanisms and posits that a positive (non-negative) appraisal style is the key mechanism that protects against the detrimental effects of stress and mediates the effects of other known resilience factors.
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The Efficacy of Resiliency Training Programs: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Randomized Trials

TL;DR: Evidence warranting low confidence is found that resiliency training programs have a small to moderate effect at improving resilience and other mental health outcomes.
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Evaluating Psychosocial Contributions to Chronic Pain Outcomes

TL;DR: A diverse array of psychological, social, and contextual factors are presented and the need to consider their roles in the development, maintenance, and treatment of chronic pain conditions is highlighted.
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Positive Psychiatry: Its Time Has Come

TL;DR: A critical overview of this emerging field of positive psychiatry is provided and promising empirical data to suggest that positive traits may be improved through psychosocial and biological interventions.
References
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The Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology [STROBE] statement: guidelines for reporting observational studies

TL;DR: The Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology (STROBE) initiative developed recommendations on what should be included in an accurate and complete report of an observational study, resulting in a checklist of 22 items (the STROBE statement) that relate to the title, abstract, introduction, methods, results, and discussion sections of articles.
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The Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology (STROBE) Statement: Guidelines for Reporting Observational Studies

TL;DR: The STROBE Statement is a checklist of items that should be addressed in articles reporting on the 3 main study designs of analytical epidemiology: cohort, casecontrol, and cross-sectional studies; these recommendations are not prescriptions for designing or conducting studies.
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Stressful life events, personality, and health: an inquiry into hardiness.

TL;DR: Personality was studied as a conditioner of the effects of stressful life events on illness onset to support the prediction that high stress/low illness executives show, by comparison with high Stress/high illness executives, more hardiness.
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Causal attribution, perceived benefits, and morbidity after a heart attack: An 8-year study.

TL;DR: Etude d'un echantillon de victimes d'une crise cardiaque (N=287) sur une periode de huit ans: mise en evidence des relations entre l'attribution de la causalite, les benefices percus, et la morbidite post-crise.
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Self-care self-efficacy, quality of life, and depression after stroke

TL;DR: Self-care self-efficacy increased after stroke and was strongly correlated with quality of life measures and depression at both 1 and 6 months after stroke, while depression decreased.
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