S
Sarah A. Mustillo
Researcher at University of Notre Dame
Publications - 77
Citations - 6851
Sarah A. Mustillo is an academic researcher from University of Notre Dame. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mental health & Poison control. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 74 publications receiving 6141 citations. Previous affiliations of Sarah A. Mustillo include Purdue University & Duke University.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Prevalence and Development of Psychiatric Disorders in Childhood and Adolescence
TL;DR: The risk of having at least 1 psychiatric disorder by age 16 years is much higher than point estimates would suggest and concurrent comorbidity and homotypic and heterotypic continuity are more marked in girls than in boys.
Journal ArticleDOI
Obesity and Psychiatric Disorder: Developmental Trajectories
Sarah A. Mustillo,Carol M. Worthman,Alaattin Erkanli,Gordon Keeler,Adrian Angold,E. Jane Costello +5 more
TL;DR: In a general population sample studied longitudinally, chronic obesity was associated with psychopathology and oppositional defiant disorder in boys and girls and depressive disorders in boys.
Journal ArticleDOI
Self-Reported Experiences of Racial Discrimination and Black–White Differences in Preterm and Low-Birthweight Deliveries: The CARDIA Study
Sarah A. Mustillo,Nancy Krieger,Erica P. Gunderson,Stephen Sidney,Heather McCreath,Catarina I. Kiefe +5 more
TL;DR: Self-reported experiences of racial discrimination were associated with preterm and low-birthweight deliveries, and such experiences may contribute to Black-White disparities in perinatal outcomes.
Journal ArticleDOI
Using Predictions and Marginal Effects to Compare Groups in Regression Models for Binary Outcomes
J. Scott Long,Sarah A. Mustillo +1 more
TL;DR: Methods for group comparisons using predicted probabilities and marginal effects on probabilities are developed for regression models for binary outcomes and how this interpretive framework can be used with a broad class of regression models and can be extended to any number of groups is considered.
Journal ArticleDOI
Children of misfortune: early adversity and cumulative inequality in perceived life trajectories.
TL;DR: Analysis of trajectories of life evaluations reveals that early adversity contributes to more negative views of the past but rising expectations for the future, and has enduring effects on life evaluations, offsetting the influence of buoyant expectations.