demands) is predictive of hypertension at low but not high socioeconomic status (SES). The objectives of the present study were to determine whether high JH and low SES (education, income, job status, and job strain) were associated with increased cardiovascular responses to laboratory social stressors. Methods: Subjects were 58 normotensive, healthy black men age 23 to 47 years. The procedure included the completion of psychosocial questionnaires and participation in a psychophysiological reactivity protocol. The reactivity protocol involved the following experimental tasks and associated recovery periods: an active speech task and an anger recall task. Measures of systolic blood pressure (SBP), diastolic blood pressure (DBP), heart rate (...
The purpose of this study was to determine whether the BP and HR responding of blacks and whites dur...
Background: African American men have a disproportionately higher incidence of and suffer greater se...
Cardiovascular reactivity to stress may have a pathophysiological role in neurogenic hypertension. W...
John Henryism connotes a strong behavioral predisposition to engage in effortful, active coping with...
The joint influence of socioeconomic status and John Henryism on blood pressure was examined in a pr...
We assessed the changes in cardiac index and total peripheral resistance underlying blood pressure r...
Previous research on John Henryism, a coping mechanism linked to hypertension in blacks, has focused...
In this study, the effects of psychosocial job stressors on the resting blood pressure (BP) of 112 b...
Lower levels of subjective and objective socioeconomic status (SES) and stress are related to advers...
OBJECTIVES: The John Henryism (JH) hypothesis suggests that, under adverse social and economic condi...
Studies examining the construct of John Henryism have not been consistent in revealing associations ...
John Henryism refers to an individual's self-perceived ability to meet the demands of the envir...
Objectives: The influence of low socioeconomic status on cardiovascular disease may be mediated in p...
HonorsUniversity of Michiganhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/162620/1/akarioya.pd
An initial objective of this project was to obtain normative blood pressure data on college age men....
The purpose of this study was to determine whether the BP and HR responding of blacks and whites dur...
Background: African American men have a disproportionately higher incidence of and suffer greater se...
Cardiovascular reactivity to stress may have a pathophysiological role in neurogenic hypertension. W...
John Henryism connotes a strong behavioral predisposition to engage in effortful, active coping with...
The joint influence of socioeconomic status and John Henryism on blood pressure was examined in a pr...
We assessed the changes in cardiac index and total peripheral resistance underlying blood pressure r...
Previous research on John Henryism, a coping mechanism linked to hypertension in blacks, has focused...
In this study, the effects of psychosocial job stressors on the resting blood pressure (BP) of 112 b...
Lower levels of subjective and objective socioeconomic status (SES) and stress are related to advers...
OBJECTIVES: The John Henryism (JH) hypothesis suggests that, under adverse social and economic condi...
Studies examining the construct of John Henryism have not been consistent in revealing associations ...
John Henryism refers to an individual's self-perceived ability to meet the demands of the envir...
Objectives: The influence of low socioeconomic status on cardiovascular disease may be mediated in p...
HonorsUniversity of Michiganhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/162620/1/akarioya.pd
An initial objective of this project was to obtain normative blood pressure data on college age men....
The purpose of this study was to determine whether the BP and HR responding of blacks and whites dur...
Background: African American men have a disproportionately higher incidence of and suffer greater se...
Cardiovascular reactivity to stress may have a pathophysiological role in neurogenic hypertension. W...