J
John G. Gunderson
Researcher at Harvard University
Publications - 291
Citations - 31902
John G. Gunderson is an academic researcher from Harvard University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Borderline personality disorder & Personality disorders. The author has an hindex of 92, co-authored 290 publications receiving 30376 citations. Previous affiliations of John G. Gunderson include University of California, San Diego & McLean Hospital.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Practice guideline for the treatment of patients with schizophrenia
Marvin I. Herz,Robert Paul Liberman,T. H. McGlashan,Jeffrey A. Lieberman,Richard Jed Wyatt,Stephen R. Marder,P. Wang,C. Allgulander,Ross J. Baldessarini,R. Balon,A. S. Bellack,C M Jr Berlin,C. H. Blackington,Peter F. Buckley,D. G. Carlson,J. Cott,Francine Cournos,P. Desai,L. Dickstein,Wayne Fenton,W. A. Fisher,Lois T. Flaherty,R. Freedman,Marc Galanter,E. Galton,Rohan Ganguli,L. K. Garrettson,S. Goldfinger,L. S. Goldman,M. Z. Goldstein,T. R. Gordy,S. H. Gray,Monica R. Green,W. M. Greenberg,John G. Gunderson,L. L. Hall,E. Haller,E. Hanin,L. Hawkins,T. W. Hester,T. Horn,J. K. Hsiao,N. V. Juthani,John M. Kane,A. Kayser,H. D. Kibel,R. A. Kimmich,R. R. Koegler,J. Krajeski,T. Kuehnel,J.S. Lamberti,Anthony F. Lehman,J. Leunello,R. L. Martin,R. McCarley,Mark McGee,Herbert Y. Meltzer,M.-Marsel Mesulam,Jeffrey L. Metzner,Loren R. Mosher,J. A. Motto,Kim T. Mueser,R. A. Munoz,H. A. Nasrallah,J. W. Newcomer,Lewis A. Opler,G. N. Peterson,M. Rapaport,Michelle Riba,V. I. Rickert,A. Rifkin,J. S. Rivenbark,S. Robertson,P. Ruiz,W. G. Ryan,M. O. Sanderson,R. B. Schiffer,P. M. Schyve,R. H. Sebring,W. W. Shen,D. Shore,G. M. Simpson,H. E. Soufi,L. I. Stein,N. Stotland,J. Strauss,D. Sundberg,D. Svendsen,Mauricio Tohen,M. Tsuang,J. G. Wagnitz,Richard D. Weiner,W. D. Weitzel,L. J. Wilkerson,D. Wingerson,C A Jr Zarate,J. Zito,Howard Zonana +97 more
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The Collaborative Longitudinal Personality Disorders Study: reliability of axis I and II diagnoses.
Mary C. Zanarini,Andrew E. Skodol,Donna S. Bender,Regina T. Dolan,Charles A. Sanislow,Elizabeth Schaefer,Leslie C. Morey,Carlos M. Grilo,M. Tracie Shea,Thomas H. McGlashan,John G. Gunderson +10 more
TL;DR: The results of this study suggest that both axis I andaxis II disorders can be diagnosed reliably when using appropriate semistructured interviews and suggest that the reliability of axis II disorders is roughly equivalent to that reliability found for most axis I disorders.
Journal ArticleDOI
The borderline diagnosis I: psychopathology, comorbidity, and personality structure.
Andrew E. Skodol,John G. Gunderson,John G. Gunderson,Bruce Pfohl,Thomas A. Widiger,W. John Livesley,Larry J. Siever,Larry J. Siever +7 more
TL;DR: The psychopathology, comorbidity, and personality structure of BPD is examined to provide a foundation to researchers on the current status of the borderline diagnosis and prospects for its future development.
Journal ArticleDOI
Treatment utilization by patients with personality disorders
Donna S. Bender,Regina T. Dolan,Andrew E. Skodol,Charles A. Sanislow,Ingrid R. Dyck,Thomas H. McGlashan,M. Tracie Shea,Mary C. Zanarini,John M. Oldham,John G. Gunderson +9 more
TL;DR: Borderline and schizotypal personality disorder are associated with extensive use of mental health resources, and other, less severe personality disorders may not be addressed sufficiently in treatment planning.
Journal ArticleDOI
Functional impairment in patients with schizotypal, borderline, avoidant, or obsessive-compulsive personality disorder.
Andrew E. Skodol,John G. Gunderson,Thomas H. McGlashan,Ingrid R. Dyck,Robert L. Stout,Donna S. Bender,Carlos M. Grilo,M. Tracie Shea,Mary C. Zanarini,Leslie C. Morey,Charles A. Sanislow,John M. Oldham +11 more
TL;DR: Patients with schizotypal personality disorder and borderline personality disorder were found to have significantly more impairment at work, in social relationships, and at leisure than patients with obsessive-compulsive personality disorder or major depressive disorder; patients with avoidant Personality disorder were intermediate.