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- Up one level
- Building Better Health: A Handbook of Behavioral Change
C. David Jenkins. Pan American Health Organization (Scientific and Technical Publication No. 590), 2003
- C. David Jenkins, PhD, Leader in the Field of Behavioral Medicine, Retires A Tribute by Martha Wedeman
Behavioral Medicine 2005;31(1):43-46 With this issue, the name of C. David Jenkins, PhD, as an executive editor of Behavioral Medicine will no longer appear on the journal’s masthead. His retirement from active editorial responsibilities marks the end of an era. Dr Jenkins was an executive editor, along with Herbert Benson,MD, and Robert Haggerty, PhD, of the Journal of Human Stress from Volume 1, number 1, in 1982 until 1988, when the name of the journal was changed to Behavioral Medicine.
- C. David Jenkins Obituary in The News & Observer
October 11, 2014 David Jenkins, 86 years old, passed into the morning light on October 8th at his home. He had been in declining health for several years. David was born on April l3, 1928, in Oak Park, IL. (also at http://www.cremnc.com/memsol.cgi?user_id=1432973)
- CDavidJenkinsCV1981.pdf
- Cigarette Smoking Its Relationship to Coronary Heart Disease and Related Risk Factors in the Western Collaborative Group Study
C. David Jenkins, Ray H. Rosenman, Stephen J. Zyzanski. Circulation 1968 (December);38:1140-1155.
- Jenkins Sleep Evaluation Questionnaire (JSEQ)
Bibliographic reference: Jenkins DC, Stanton B, Niemcryk SJ et al. A scale for the estimation of sleep problems in clinical research. J Clin Epidemiol 1988;41(4):313-321
- Prediction of clinical coronary heart disease by a test for the coronary-prone behavior pattern
New England Journal of Medicine. June 6, 1974;290(23):1271-1274. Abstract: Prospective study of 2750 employed men who completed a computer-scored test questionnaire measuring the coronary-prone Type A behavior pattern showed that high scorers had twice the incidence of new coronary heart disease as low scorers over a four-year period. Subjects with different initial clinical manifestations of coronary disease did not differ from one another in their Type A test scores. The double-blind design of these studies and the orderly relation of Type A scores to coronary-disease risk suggest that the coronary-prone behavior pattern is prospectively linked to the pathogenesis of coronary heart disease. The findings also indicate that the test questionnaire used is a valid means of measuring some of the ways in which behavior contributes to coronary risk.