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Original Articles

The relation of spouse illness representations to patient representations and coping behavior: A study in couples dealing with a newly diagnosed cancer

, PhD, , MSc, , MSc & , PhD
Pages 145-159 | Received 20 Mar 2018, Accepted 01 Aug 2018, Published online: 29 Oct 2018

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Read on this site (2)

Evangelos C. Karademas. (2022) A new perspective on dyadic regulation in chronic illness: the dyadic regulation connectivity model. Health Psychology Review 16:1, pages 1-21.
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Anita DeLongis & Talia Morstead. (2019) Bringing the social context into research using the common sense model. Health Psychology Review 13:4, pages 481-483.
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Articles from other publishers (5)

Jiayi Gu, He Wang, Jiaqin Pei, Jingyu Meng & Yan Song. (2023) The dyadic coping experience of ICU transfer patients and their spouses: A qualitative study . Nursing in Critical Care.
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Zoe Giannousi, Christoforos Thomadakis, Evangelos C. Karademas & Antonia Paschali. (2023) The dyadic regulation approach of coping and illness representations in female cancer patients and their partners. Frontiers in Psychology 14.
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Georgia Dimitraki, Emmanouil Papastefanakis, Georgia Ktistaki, Antonis Fanouriakis, Christina Adamichou, Nikolaos Kougkas, Argyro Repa, Nestor Avgoustidis, George Bertsias, Prodromos Sidiropoulos, Alexandros N. Vgontzas, Panagiotis G. Simos & Evangelos C. Karademas. (2022) The relation of partners’ illness representations to the coping behaviors of patients with inflammatory rheumatic diseases through patients’ illness representation: A dyadic regulation process. Current Psychology 42:20, pages 16923-16931.
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Chloe M. E. Fletcher, Ingrid Flight, Kate M. Gunn, Pandora Patterson & Carlene Wilson. (2023) Development and initial psychometric evaluation of the Perceptions of Parental Illness Questionnaire for Cancer. Psycho-Oncology 32:7, pages 1130-1141.
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Emma Ní Néill, Helen L. Richards, Derek Hennessey & Dónal G. Fortune. (2023) ‘Like a ticking time bomb’: A qualitative study exploring the illness experiences of adults with kidney stone disease. British Journal of Health Psychology.
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