Joanna O. Shadlow
Affiliations: | Child Clinical Psychology | University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS, United States |
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Children
Sign in to add traineeKristen N. Gray | grad student | ||
Lauren Winston | grad student | University of Tulsa | |
Meredith D. Pearson | grad student | 2016- | University of Tulsa |
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Publications
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Kell PA, Huber FA, Street EN, et al. (2022) Sleep Problems Mediate the Relationship Between Psychosocial Stress and Pain Facilitation in Native Americans: A Structural Equation Modeling Analysis from the Oklahoma Study of Native American Pain Risk. Annals of Behavioral Medicine : a Publication of the Society of Behavioral Medicine |
Lannon EW, Hellman N, Huber FA, et al. (2022) Exploration of the trait-activation model of pain catastrophizing in Native Americans: results from the Oklahoma Study of Native American pain risk (OK-SNAP). Scandinavian Journal of Pain |
Güereca YM, Kell PA, Kuhn BL, et al. (2022) The Relationship Between Experienced Discrimination and Pronociceptive Processes in Native Americans: Results From the Oklahoma Study of Native American Pain Risk. The Journal of Pain |
Ross EN, Toledo TA, Huber F, et al. (2021) The role of self-evaluated pain sensitivity as a mediator of objectively measured pain tolerance in Native Americans: findings from the Oklahoma Study of Native American Pain Risk (OK-SNAP). Journal of Behavioral Medicine |
Rhudy JL, Huber FA, Toledo TA, et al. (2021) Psychosocial and cardiometabolic predictors of chronic pain onset in Native Americans: serial mediation analyses of 2-year prospective data from the Oklahoma Study of Native American Pain Risk. Pain |
Rhudy JL, Kuhn BL, Demuth MJ, et al. (2021) Are cardiometabolic markers of allostatic load associated with pronociceptive processes in Native Americans?: A structural equation modeling analysis from the Oklahoma Study of Native American Pain Risk. The Journal of Pain |
Kell PA, Hellman N, Huber FA, et al. (2021) The relationship between adverse life events and endogenous inhibition of pain and spinal nociception: Findings from the Oklahoma Study of Native American Pain Risk (OK-SNAP). The Journal of Pain |
Huber FA, Kell PA, Kuhn BL, et al. (2021) The Association Between Adverse Life Events, Psychological Stress, and Pain-Promoting Affect and Cognitions in Native Americans: Results from the Oklahoma Study of Native American Pain Risk. Journal of Racial and Ethnic Health Disparities |
Rhudy JL, Arnau RC, Huber FA, et al. (2020) Examining Configural, Metric, and Scalar Invariance of the Pain Catastrophizing Scale in Native American and Non-Hispanic White Adults in the Oklahoma Study of Native American Pain Risk (OK-SNAP). Journal of Pain Research. 13: 961-969 |
Ehrhardt MD, Gray KN, Kuhn BL, et al. (2020) A qualitative analysis of pain meaning: results from the Oklahoma Study of Native American Pain Risk (OK-SNAP). Ethnicity & Health. 1-12 |