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Maria E. Pagano

Researcher at Case Western Reserve University

Publications -  115
Citations -  10381

Maria E. Pagano is an academic researcher from Case Western Reserve University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Psychosocial & Personality disorders. The author has an hindex of 53, co-authored 115 publications receiving 9715 citations. Previous affiliations of Maria E. Pagano include Northwestern University & Southern Illinois University Carbondale.

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Influence of Psychiatric Comorbidity on Recovery and Recurrence in Generalized Anxiety Disorder, Social Phobia, and Panic Disorder: A 12-Year Prospective Study

TL;DR: The anxiety disorders are depicted as insidious, with a chronic clinical course, low rates of recovery, and relatively high probabilities of recurrence, and the presence of particular comorbid psychiatric disorders significantly lowered the likelihood of recovery from anxiety disorders and increased thelihood of their recurrence.
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Hunger in Children in the United States: Potential Behavioral and Emotional Correlates

TL;DR: Children from families that report multiple experiences of food insufficiency and hunger are more likely to show behavioral, emotional, and academic problems on a standardized measure of psychosocial dysfunction than children from the same low-income communities whose families do not report experiences of hunger.
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Use of the Pediatric Symptom Checklist to Screen for Psychosocial Problems in Pediatric Primary Care: A National Feasibility Study

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors evaluated the feasibility of routine psychosocial screening using the Pediatric Symptom Checklist (PSC) in pediatrics by using a brief version of the checklist in a large sample representative of the full range of pediatric practice settings in the United States and Canada.
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Two-Year Prevalence and Stability of Individual DSM-IV Criteria for Schizotypal, Borderline, Avoidant, and Obsessive-Compulsive Personality Disorders: Toward a Hybrid Model of Axis II Disorders

TL;DR: Patterns suggest that personality disorders are hybrids of traits and symptomatic behaviors and that the interaction of these elements over time helps determine diagnostic stability, and may also inform criterion selection for DSM-V.