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Stephen Touyz

Researcher at University of Sydney

Publications -  380
Citations -  12518

Stephen Touyz is an academic researcher from University of Sydney. The author has contributed to research in topics: Eating disorders & Anorexia nervosa (differential diagnoses). The author has an hindex of 55, co-authored 337 publications receiving 10390 citations. Previous affiliations of Stephen Touyz include Macquarie University & Max Planck Society.

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Comparing cognitive behavioural therapy for eating disorders integrated with behavioural weight loss therapy to cognitive behavioural therapy-enhanced alone in overweight or obese people with bulimia nervosa or binge eating disorder: study protocol for a randomised controlled trial

TL;DR: In this article, a manualised therapy called HAPIFED (Healthy APproach to weIght management and Food in Eating Disorders) has been developed, which integrates the leading evidence-based psychological therapies, cognitive behavioural therapy-enhanced (CBT-E) and behavioural weight loss treatment (BWLT) for binge eating disorder and obesity respectively.
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The short inventory of grazing (SIG): development and validation of a new brief measure of a common eating behaviour with a compulsive dimension

TL;DR: Results support the positioning of “compulsive” LOC grazing on a continuum of problematic eating and demonstrate appropriate psychometric properties of a short inventory of grazing, a parsimonious measure of this eating pattern of emergent interest.
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How do body-dissatisfied and body-satisfied males and females judge the size of thin female celebrities?

TL;DR: Misperceptions of media images appear to result from prior body dissatisfaction, and body-dissatisfied males misperceive female bodies and view a thin body size as ideal for females, implicating the need to target both body-Diss Satisfied males and females in future interventions.
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Correcting the eating disorder in anorexia nervosa

TL;DR: A statistically significant improvement was noted in the occurrence of obsessional eating behaviour and in table manners, but there was no change in the speed of eating, disposal of food or behaviours which reduce caloric intake.
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Grazing behaviour and associations with obesity, eating disorders, and health-related quality of life in the Australian population.

TL;DR: Grazing, especially when associated with a more severe sense of loss of control, is a problematic eating behaviour in the general population, as well as in persons with high BMI, a binge-type ED, or both.