S
Stephenie C. Lemon
Researcher at University of Massachusetts Medical School
Publications - 202
Citations - 5571
Stephenie C. Lemon is an academic researcher from University of Massachusetts Medical School. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Population. The author has an hindex of 37, co-authored 158 publications receiving 4693 citations. Previous affiliations of Stephenie C. Lemon include University of Massachusetts Amherst & Rush University Medical Center.
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Classification and regression tree analysis in public health: methodological review and comparison with logistic regression
TL;DR: C&RT is a promising research tool for the identification of at-risk populations in public health research and outreach and is compared to a common approach to logistic regression, the stepwise selection procedure.
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Contributions of Weight Perceptions to Weight Loss Attempts: Differences by Body Mass Index and Gender
TL;DR: Perception of oneself to be overweight was a strong correlate for weight loss attempts across both genders and the effect of targeting accuracy of self-perceived weight status in weight loss interventions deserves research attention.
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Association between adult attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder and obesity in the US population
Sherry L. Pagoto,Carol Curtin,Stephenie C. Lemon,Linda G. Bandini,Linda G. Bandini,Kristin L. Schneider,Jamie S. Bodenlos,Yunsheng Ma +7 more
TL;DR: Results suggest that adult ADHD is associated with overweight and obesity, and mediation analyses suggest that binge eating disorder (BED), but not depression, partially mediates the associations between ADHD and both overweight and Obesity.
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Colorectal Cancer Screening Participation: Comparisons With Mammography and Prostate-Specific Antigen Screening
TL;DR: Personal factors independently related to CRC screening were not consistent with those related to mammography and PSA screening, and this lack of consistency may reflect different stages of adoption of each type of screening by clinicians and the public.
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Lifestyle behaviours and weight among hospital‐based nurses
TL;DR: The weight, weight-related perceptions and lifestyle behaviours of hospital-based nurses are described and the relationship of demographic, health, weight and job characteristics with lifestyle behaviours are explored to reinforce the need to address the hospital environment and culture.