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D-Index & Metrics

Social Sciences and Humanities

D-Index
40
Citations
8048
World Ranking
5306
National Ranking
2510

Overview

Catherine M. Stoney is affiliated with the National Institutes of Health in the United States. Their research spans several fields related to health professions, medicine, and psychology, with a significant focus on general health professions and clinical psychology. Their interdisciplinary work covers topics including health disparities and outcomes, birth, development, and health, food security and health in diverse populations, health policy implementation science, employment and welfare studies, smoking behavior and cessation, and obesity, physical activity, and diet.

The scientist's recent publications demonstrate active engagement with cardiovascular health, public health equity, and preventive medicine. Notable papers include:

  • "Social Determinants of Cardiovascular Health: Early Life Adversity as a Contributor to Disparities in Cardiovascular Diseases" (2020, The Journal of Pediatrics)
  • "E-Cigarettes and Cardiopulmonary Health" (2021, Function)
  • "Timing, duration, and differential susceptibility to early life adversities and cardiovascular disease risk across the lifespan: Implications for future research" (2021, Preventive Medicine)
  • "National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute cardiovascular clinical trial perspective" (2020, American Heart Journal)
  • "Community Engagement Alliance (CEAL): A National Institutes of Health Program to Advance Health Equity" (2023, American Journal of Public Health)

Frequent collaborators in their scholarly work include Rebecca Campo, George A. Mensah, Shakira F. Suglia, Allison A. Appleton, and Maria E. Bleil. These collaborations reflect interdisciplinary efforts across public health, clinical research, and community health initiatives.

The venues in which this scientist publishes are varied but tend to focus on highly specialized journals related to pediatrics, cardiovascular health, general health, and public health. Specific publication venues include:

  • The Journal of Pediatrics
  • Function
  • Preventive Medicine
  • American Heart Journal
  • American Journal of Public Health

The main fields of study represented in Catherine M. Stoney's work emphasize health professions with a strong integration of medical and psychological perspectives. Subfields show a concentration in clinical psychology and general health professions alongside pediatrics and public health domains.

Overall, the body of work contributes to understanding health disparities, the effects of early life adversity on cardiovascular health, and initiatives aimed at advancing health equity through community engagement and policy implementation science.

Best Publications

  • Major Depressive Disorder and Bipolar Disorder Predispose Youth to Accelerated Atherosclerosis and Early Cardiovascular Disease: A Scientific Statement from the American Heart Association

    Benjamin I. Goldstein;Mercedes R. Carnethon;Karen A. Matthews;Roger S. McIntyre

  • Sex Differences in Physiological Responses to Stress and in Coronary Heart Disease: A Causal Link?

    Catherine M. Stoney;Mary C. Davis;Karen A. Matthews

  • Depressed mood is related to high-frequency heart rate variability during stressors.

    Joel W. Hughes;Catherine M. Stoney

  • The validation of an active control intervention for Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction (MBSR)

    Donal G. MacCoon;Zac E. Imel;Melissa A. Rosenkranz;Jenna G. Sheftel

  • The NIH Science of Behavior Change Program: Transforming the science through a focus on mechanisms of change.

    Lisbeth Nielsen;Melissa Riddle;Jonathan W. King

  • Premenopausal and postmenopausal women differ in their cardiovascular and neuroendocrine responses to behavioral stressors.

    Patrice G. Saab;Karen A. Matthews;Catherine M. Stoney;Robert H. McDonald

  • Emotion assessment using the NIH Toolbox

    Unknown

  • Hemodynamic adjustments to laboratory stress: the influence of gender and personality.

    Michael T. Allen;Catherine M. Stoney;Jane F. Owens;Karen A. Matthews

  • Influences of sex and age on cardiovascular responses during stress.

    Karen A. Matthews;Catherine M. Stoney

  • Are Stress Eaters at Risk for the Metabolic Syndrome

    Elissa Epel;Sherlyn Jimenez;Kelly Brownell;Laura Stroud

  • Menopausal status influences ambulatory blood pressure levels and blood pressure changes during mental stress.

    J F Owens;C M Stoney;K A Matthews

  • Sex differences in lipid, lipoprotein, cardiovascular, and neuroendocrine responses to acute stress.

    Catherine M. Stoney;Karen A. Matthews;Robert H. Mcdonald;Cheryl A. Johnson

  • The selection of comparators for randomized controlled trials of health-related behavioral interventions: recommendations of an NIH expert panel.

    Kenneth E Freedland;Abby C King;Walter T Ambrosius;Evan Mayo-Wilson

  • Stress and lipoprotein metabolism: Modulators and mechanisms

    David N. Brindley;Barbara S. McCann;Raymond Niaura;Catherine M. Stoney

  • Hostility and the metabolic syndrome in older males: the normative aging study.

    Raymond Niaura;Sara M. Banks;Kenneth D. Ward;Catherine M. Stoney

  • Assessing psychological well-being: self-report instruments for the NIH Toolbox.

    John M. Salsman;Jin Shei Lai;Hugh C. Hendrie;Zeeshan Butt

  • Lipids in psychological research: the last decade.

    Raymond Niaura;Catherine M. Stoney;Peter N. Herbert

  • Influences of the Normal Menstrual Cycle on Physiologic Functioning During Behavioral Stress

    Catherine M. Stoney;Jane F. Owens;Karen A. Matthews;Mary C. Davis

  • Assessment of stress and self-efficacy for the NIH Toolbox for Neurological and Behavioral Function

    Mary Jo Kupst;Zeeshan Butt;Catherine M. Stoney;James W. Griffith

  • Are cardiovascular responses to behavioral stressors a stable individual difference variable in childhood

    Karen A. Matthews;Charles J. Rakaczky;Catherine M. Stoney;Stephen B. Manuck

  • Does the gender relevance of the stressor influence sex differences in psychophysiological responses

    Karen A. Matthews;Mary C. Davis;Catherine M. Stoney;Jane F. Owens

  • Do cardiovascular responses to laboratory stress relate to ambulatory blood pressure levels?: Yes, in some of the people, some of the time.

    K A Matthews;J F Owens;M T Allen;C M Stoney

Frequent Co-Authors

Karen A. Matthews
Karen A. Matthews University of Pittsburgh
Joel W. Hughes
Joel W. Hughes Kent State University
Mary C. Davis
Mary C. Davis Arizona State University
Susan M. Czajkowski
Susan M. Czajkowski National Institutes of Health
John M. Salsman
John M. Salsman Wake Forest University
Stephen B. Manuck
Stephen B. Manuck University of Pittsburgh
Paul A. Pilkonis
Paul A. Pilkonis University of Pittsburgh
Erin C. Dunn
Erin C. Dunn Harvard University
Susan Redline
Susan Redline Brigham and Women's Hospital

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