Hayley Treloar Padovano Source Confirmed

Affiliation confirmed via AI analysis of OpenAlex, ORCID, and web sources.

High Impact

Researcher

John Brown University

faculty

26 h-index 95 pubs 2,088 cited

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Biography and Research Information

OverviewAI-generated summary

Hayley Treloar Padovano is a faculty member at John Brown University whose research addresses substance abuse, mental health, and psychosocial development, particularly among children and adolescents. Her work encompasses both mental and behavioral health interventions, with a recent focus on cannabis and cannabinoid research. Padovano utilizes meta-analytic techniques and web-based surveys to explore the intricate relationships between daily experiences, emotional states, and substance use patterns. Her research has investigated the connections between minority stress and nicotine use among sexual minority youth, as well as the impact of substance use on adherence to public health guidelines during the COVID-19 pandemic. She also studies the role of social contexts in youth cannabis use treatment.

Metrics

  • h-index: 26
  • Publications: 95
  • Citations: 2,088

Selected Publications

  • Situational correlates of adolescents’ alcohol outcome expectancies in daily life. (2025) DOI
  • Momentary Minority Stress, Nicotine Use, and Craving: Moderation by Nicotine-Use Motives Among Sexual Minority Youth (2024) DOI
  • Alcohol-associated liver disease and behavioral and medical cofactors: unmet needs and opportunities (2024) DOI
  • A test of competing mediators linking trouble sleeping to cannabis use in adolescents and emerging adults. (2023) DOI
  • The daily association between affect and alcohol use: A meta-analysis of individual participant data. (2023) DOI
  • Cannabis craving in response to alcohol cues among adolescents and young adults in the laboratory and in daily life. (2022) DOI
  • Momentary Associations Among Minority Stress, Craving, Affect, and Nicotine Use Among Sexual Minority Youth (2022) DOI
  • Parent and Adolescent Reports of Parental Monitoring and Sources of Parental Knowledge are Linked to Cannabis Use and Symptom Development in Adolescents (2022) DOI
  • The daily association between affect and alcohol use: A meta-analysis of individual participant data (2022) DOI
  • Associations between social network characteristics and alcohol use alone or in combination with cannabis use in first-year college students. (2021) DOI

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