Ryan Shorey

Ryan Shorey

University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

H-index: 53

North America-United States

Professor Information

University

University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

Position

___

Citations(all)

9188

Citations(since 2020)

5584

Cited By

6065

hIndex(all)

53

hIndex(since 2020)

42

i10Index(all)

150

i10Index(since 2020)

133

Email

University Profile Page

University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

Research & Interests List

Clinical Psychology

Top articles of Ryan Shorey

Impulsivity Dimensions Predict Treatment Dropout Among Women in Residential Treatment for Substance Use Disorders

Residential treatment for substance use disorders (SUDs) is effective at reducing substance use, dependence, and other related problems. However, dropout from treatment against medical advice (AMA) is common in residential treatment settings. Studies have shown that impulsivity is associated with substance misuse and treatment dropout in predominately male samples, but less is known regarding whether impulsivity dimensions predict treatment dropout among women. This study examined impulsivity dimensions (ie, negative urgency, positive urgency, lack of perseverance, lack of premeditation, and sensation seeking) as predictors of dropout AMA among women in a residential substance use treatment facility (N = 229). Logistic regression results demonstrated that elevations in lack of perseverance and sensation seeking were associated with an increased odds of treatment dropout AMA and that lack of …

Authors

Evan J Basting,Alyssa M Medenblik,Kaja Switalska,Alisa R Garner,Ryan C Shorey,Gregory L Stuart

Journal

Substance Use: Research and Treatment

Published Date

2024/4

Intimate partner violence perpetration among sexual minority young adults: associations with alcohol use, PTSD symptoms, internalized homophobia, and heterosexist discrimination

Lesbian, gay, bisexual, queer, and other sexual minority (LGBQ+) young adults report similar or higher rates of intimate partner violence (IPV) perpetration than their heterosexual peers. Elevated IPV risk among LGBQ+ young adults may be attributable to experiencing heterosexist discrimination and internalized homophobia. In addition, LGBQ+ people report disproportionate posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms, alcohol use, and IPV perpetration in dating relationships. Thus, this study explored which combinations of IPV risk factors (i.e., experiencing heterosexist discrimination, internalized homophobia, PTSD symptoms, alcohol use) related to forms of IPV perpetration, inclusive of psychological, physical, and sexual forms, in a sample of 342 LGBQ+ young adults. Internalized homophobia was related to psychological IPV perpetration at high and medium levels of PTSD symptoms and only high levels of …

Authors

Evan J Basting,Alyssa M Medenblik,Alisa R Garner,Jacqueline A Sullivan,Gloria J Romero,Ryan C Shorey,Gregory L Stuart

Journal

Journal of interpersonal violence

Published Date

2024/1

Alcohol use, discrimination, and psychological partner abuse among LGBQ+ college students: results from a daily diary study

Alcohol use correlates with psychological partner abuse (PA) perpetration among lesbian, gay, bisexual, queer, and other nonheterosexual (LGBQ+) young adults. However, less is known about the proximal association between alcohol use and psychological PA within this population, which would provide valuable information for intervention development. Informed by minority stress and alcohol-related PA theories, we evaluated whether (a) psychological PA perpetration odds increased as the number of drinks consumed prior to psychological PA on a given day increased, (b) psychological PA perpetration odds were greater following heavy episodic drinking (HED) relative to non-HED, and (c) experiencing LGBQ+-specific discrimination (i.e., heterosexist harassment, incivility, and hostility) strengthened the association between daily alcohol use (number of drinks, HED) and subsequent psychological PA …

Authors

Meagan J Brem,Caitlin Wolford-Clevenger,Alisa R Garner,Katie M Edwards,Ryan C Shorey

Journal

Journal of interpersonal violence

Published Date

2024/1

Contextual factors and disclosure of sexual assault among sexual and gender minority college students

PurposeThe purpose of this descriptive study was to examine the context and disclosure of sexual assault among sexual and gender minority (SGM) individuals.MethodSurvey responses from SGM college students completing the 2020–2021 Healthy Minds Study who reported a sexual assault (N = 73) were included.ResultsDescriptive analyses revealed most sexual assaults occurred on campus (63.0%), involved alcohol (64.4%), and were perpetrated by a man (91.7%) who was a friend (27.4%), acquaintance (24.7%), or stranger (21.9%). Further, most participants (78.1%) had disclosed their sexual assault, and no differences in rates of disclosure were seen as a function of sexual orientation or gender identity. Participants commonly disclosed to a friend (68.5%), roommate (27.4%), or romantic partner (21.9%). Fewer participants disclosed if assaulted by a family member, casual or first date, or current …

Authors

Lauren R Grocott,Benjamin W Katz,Emily A Muñoz,Katie M Edwards,Ryan C Shorey

Journal

Journal of family violence

Published Date

2023/11

Social support as a buffer of the association between sexual assault and trauma symptoms among transgender and gender diverse individuals

The prevalence of experiencing sexual assault is alarmingly high among Transgender and Gender Diverse people (TGD; people whose gender identities and/or expressions are not traditionally associated with their sex assigned at birth) and is associated with various mental health sequalae. Perceived social support has been shown to abate the negative outcomes of sexual assault among cisgender individuals, yet little is known about this association among TGD people, especially which provider of support (i.e., family, friends, or significant others) may be most beneficial. To that end, 191 TGD adults were recruited through Amazon’s Mechanical Turk to examine perceived social support as a potential moderator of the association between sexual assault victimization and post-sexual assault trauma symptomology. Results showed an interaction trending toward significance between sexual assault and support from …

Authors

Lauren R Grocott,Thomas E Schlechter,Shannon MJ Wilder,Cayla M O’Hair,Christine A Gidycz,Ryan C Shorey

Journal

Journal of interpersonal violence

Published Date

2023/1

Reproductive coercion victimization and associated mental health outcomes among female-identifying young adults

Reproductive coercion is a serious public health problem. Victimization has been associated with poor mental health outcomes, including symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and depression in clinical and college samples. We build on these findings by examining the association between reproductive coercion victimization and mental and behavioral health outcomes, including depression, PTSD symptoms, anxiety, and drinking behaviors in a diverse community-derived sample of female-identifying young adults (mean age = 20; SD=.72). Participants (n = 368) were originally recruited as part of a study on dating violence in seven Texas public high schools. Participants completed an online study that included demographic questions and measures that assessed the variables of interest. Results of regression analyses showed that reproductive coercion victimization predicted depression, anxiety …

Authors

Emily A Muñoz,Ryan C Shorey,Jeff R Temple

Journal

Journal of Trauma & Dissociation

Published Date

2023/8/8

Examining trauma, anxiety, and depression as predictors of dropout from residential treatment for substance use disorders

Substance use disorders (SUDs) are highly prevalent and have deleterious effects on one's health and well‐being. Inpatient treatment for SUDs reduces patient relapse, which subsequently ameliorates these negative effects on the individual and society. Additionally, those who complete treatment are less likely to relapse compared to those who do not complete treatment. Thus, maintaining patient engagement in treatment and reducing the rates of those leaving against medical advice (AMA) is particularly important. Examining the factors and comorbidities that may contribute to treatment dropout has the potential to identify at‐risk patients in need of additional individualized intervention. The current study aimed to examine comorbid anxiety, depression, and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms as predictors of dropout AMA in a residential substance use treatment population. Results showed that …

Authors

Alyssa M Medenblik,Alisa R Garner,Evan J Basting,Jacqueline A Sullivan,Mary C Jensen,Ryan C Shorey,Gregory L Stuart

Journal

Journal of clinical psychology

Published Date

2023/9/21

The Interactive Effect of Alcohol Use and Depressive Symptoms in Predicting Couples’ Risk for Intimate Partner Violence Perpetration

PurposeThe prevalence of intimate partner violence (IPV) is alarmingly high among young adults. Alcohol use and depression have both been shown to increase risk for IPV. However, little is known about whether depression and alcohol may interact to predict IPV in couples.MethodsThe current study utilized a sample of 81 racially and ethnically diverse young adult couples (91.4% between the ages of 18–24) to examine alcohol use and depressive symptoms as predictors of physical, sexual, and psychological IPV perpetration. Data were analyzed following an Actor-Partner Interdependence Model (APIM) framework, allowing for the examination of both actor and partner effects.ResultsResults indicated that one’s own alcohol use was associated with an increase in one’s own psychological IPV perpetration, and one’s own depressive symptoms were associated with an increase in one’s own physical and …

Authors

Cayla M O’Hair,Lauren R Grocott,James K McNulty,Jeff R Temple,Ryan C Shorey

Journal

Journal of family violence

Published Date

2023/7

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