Jessica Sarah Tutino

Jessica Sarah Tutino
  • Doctor of Philosophy
  • University of Ottawa

About

7
Publications
1,603
Reads
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71
Citations
Current institution
Education
September 2015 - August 2020
University of Ottawa
Field of study
  • Clinical Psychology

Publications

Publications (7)
Article
Full-text available
Beliefs and expectations about treatment have been shown to significantly impact treatment outcomes in medical settings. However, researchers have seldom examined the role of beliefs within the context of cognitive behavioral therapy. Beliefs may be particularly salient for safety behavior (SB) use in exposure therapy, as clinicians often hold opin...
Article
Full-text available
Although treatments for schizophrenia and psychosis have improved significantly over time, many clients still experience social disparities, such as poverty, unemployment, social network strain, and barriers to community supports, that can negatively impact clinical outcomes and perpetuate the cycle of illness. Research is needed to help better und...
Article
Full-text available
Background There is a debate among researchers and clinicians regarding whether the judicious use of safety behaviours (SBs) during exposure therapy is helpful or detrimental. Central to this debate is the premise that SBs may interfere with one’s ability to gather disconfirmatory evidence. Aims No study to date has assessed how SB use may impact...
Article
Researchers have seldom compared how various psychological factors relate to men’s sexual health. We sought to identify whether and how psychological risk factors (i.e. anxiety sensitivity, emotion regulation, psychological distress) predict men’s sexual health (i.e. functioning, sexual quality of life, frequency of sexual activity). Men (N = 306)...
Article
Background: Recent research findings suggest that women who report high anxiety sensitivity (AS; the fear of physiologic sensations associated with anxiety) also report increased sexual dysfunction and decreased sexual satisfaction. Moreover, findings suggest that maladaptive emotion regulation (ER) can contribute to the relation between AS and ps...
Article
Full-text available
Background and objectives: Both anxiety sensitivity (AS) and maladaptive emotion regulation (ER) may contribute to anxious and depressive symptoms. Given the overlap between ER and AS—They both pertain to maladaptive beliefs about emotions (BE)—We tested whether AS would demonstrate an indirect relationship with anxiety and depressive symptoms via...

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