J
Johanna E. Soet
Researcher at Emory University
Publications - 20
Citations - 2147
Johanna E. Soet is an academic researcher from Emory University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Condom & Motivational interviewing. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 20 publications receiving 2035 citations. Previous affiliations of Johanna E. Soet include University of Michigan.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Prevalence and predictors of women's experience of psychological trauma during childbirth.
TL;DR: The pain experienced during the birth, levels of social support, self-efficacy, internal locus of control, trait anxiety, and coping were significant predictors of the development of posttraumatic stress disorder symptoms after the birth.
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Motivational interviewing in health promotion: it sounds like something is changing.
TL;DR: An overview of MI is provided, outlining its philosophic orientation and essential strategies, and nuances associated with the use of MI in health promotion and chronic disease prevention are described, and future directions are offered.
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Social cognitive correlates of sexual experience and condom use among 13- through 15-year-old adolescents
Colleen DiIorio,William N. Dudley,Maureen Kelly,Johanna E. Soet,Joyce Mbwara,Jennifer Sharpe Potter +5 more
TL;DR: Among sexually active adolescents, those who expressed confidence in putting on a condom, and in being able to refuse sex with a sexual partner, and who expressed more favorable outcome expectancies associated with using a condom were more likely to use condoms consistently.
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Using motivational interviewing to promote adherence to antiretroviral medications: A randomized controlled study
Colleen DiIorio,Frances McCarty,Ken Resnicow,Marcia McDonnell Holstad,Johanna E. Soet,Katherine A. Yeager,Sanjay Sharma,Donald E. Morisky,B. Lundberg +8 more
TL;DR: Results for the percent of doses taken on schedule suggests that the MI intervention may be a useful approach for addressing specific aspects of medication adherence, such as adherrence to a specified dosing schedule.
Journal ArticleDOI
Using motivational interviewing to promote adherence to antiretroviral medications: a pilot study.
Colleen DiIorio,Ken Resnicow,Marcia McDonnell,Johanna E. Soet,Frances McCarty,Katherine A. Yeager +5 more
TL;DR: Although there were no significant differences in the number of medications missed during the past 4 days, participants in the MI group reported being more likely to follow the medication regimen as prescribed by their health care provider.