Items where Author is "Kukreti, S"
Up a level |
HUANG, Y.-T., RUCKWONGPATR, K., CHEN, J.-K., PAKPOUR, A.H., SIAW, Y.-L., NADHIROH, S.R., KUKRETI, S., CHEN, J.-S., POTENZA, M.N., GRIFFITHS, M.D. and LIN, C.-Y., 2024. Specific internet disorders in university students in Taiwan and Hong Kong: psychometric properties with invariance testing for the traditional Chinese version of the Assessment of Criteria for Specific Internet-Use Disorders (ACSID-11). International Journal of Mental Health and Addiction. ISSN 1557-1874
KUKRETI, S., HSIEH, M.-T., LIU, C.-H., CHEN, J.-S., CHEN, Y.-J., HSIEH, M.-T., LIN, C.-Y. and GRIFFITHS, M.D., 2024. Fear, stress, susceptibility, and problematic social media use explain motivation for COVID-19 preventive behaviors among patients with stroke and their caregivers. INQUIRY: The Journal of Health Care Organization, Provision, and Financing, 61. ISSN 1945-7243
CHEN, Y.-J., KUKRETI, S., YANG, H.-L., LIU, C.-C., YEH, Y.-C., FUNG, X.C.C., LIU, C.-H., LIU, L.-F., GRIFFITHS, M.D., YANG, Y.-C. and LIN, C.-Y., 2024. Psychometric properties of instruments assessing intrinsic capacity: A systematic review. Asian Journal of Social Health and Behavior, 6 (4), pp. 141-155. ISSN 2772-4204
KUKRETI, S., STRONG, C., CHEN, J.-S., CHEN, Y.-J., GRIFFITHS, M.D., HSIEH, M.-T. and LIN, C.-Y., 2023. The association of care burden with motivation of vaccine acceptance among caregivers of stroke patients during the COVID-19 pandemic: mediating roles of problematic social media use, worry, and fear. BMC Psychology, 11: 157. ISSN 2050-7283
CHEN, Y., KUKRETI, S., YANG, H., LIU, C., YEH, Y., FUNG, X.C.C., LIU, C., LIU, L., GRIFFITHS, M.D., YANG, Y. and LIN, C., 2023. Psychometric properties of instruments assessing intrinsic capacity: a systematic review. Asian Journal of Social Health and Behavior, 6 (4), pp. 141-155. ISSN 2772-4204
KUKRETI, S., AHORSU, D.K., STRONG, C., CHEN, I.-H., LIN, C.-Y., KO, N.-Y., GRIFFITHS, M.D., CHEN, Y.-P., KUO, Y.-J. and PAKPOUR, A.H., 2021. Post-traumatic stress disorder in Chinese teachers during COVID-19 pandemic: roles of fear of COVID-19, nomophobia, and psychological distress. Healthcare, 9 (10): 1288. ISSN 2227-9032