Search filters

List of works by Jessica J. Wyse

"I Don't Mind Doing What It Takes to be Safe." Patient Perspectives of Urine Drug Testing for Pain

scientific article published on 10 February 2020

Clinical Strategies for the Treatment and Management of Patients Prescribed Long-term Opioid Therapy

scientific article published on 01 September 2019

Employment and vocational rehabilitation experiences among veterans with polytrauma/traumatic brain injury history

scientific article published on 27 September 2018

Making Ends Meet After Prison

scientific article

Medications for opioid use disorder in the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) health care system: Historical perspective, lessons learned, and next steps

scientific article published on 01 January 2018

Narrative change, narrative stability, and structural constraint: The case of prisoner reentry narratives

scientific article published on 06 July 2016

Older Former Prisoners' Pathways to Sobriety

scientific article published on 17 August 2017

Older Men's Social Integration After Prison.

scientific article published in December 2016

Pay-for-Performance and Veteran Care in the VHA and the Community: a Systematic Review

scientific article published on 26 April 2018

Predictors of timely opioid agonist treatment initiation among veterans with and without HIV

scientific article published on 09 March 2019

Provider reasons for discontinuing long-term opioid therapy following aberrant urine drug tests differ based on the type of substance identified

scientific article published on 01 July 2018

REHABILITATING CRIMINAL SELVES: Gendered Strategies in Community Corrections

scientific article published on April 2013

Romantic Relationships and Criminal Desistance: Pathways and Processes

scientific article

Setting Expectations, Following Orders, Safety, and Standardization: Clinicians' Strategies to Guide Difficult Conversations About Opioid Prescribing

scientific article published on 22 April 2019

The impacts of welfare reform on federal assistance to persistently poor children