S
Suzanne R. Sunday
Researcher at Cornell University
Publications - 44
Citations - 3112
Suzanne R. Sunday is an academic researcher from Cornell University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Eating disorders & Bulimia nervosa. The author has an hindex of 28, co-authored 44 publications receiving 3010 citations. Previous affiliations of Suzanne R. Sunday include New York University & North Shore University Hospital.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Psychiatric comorbidity in patients with eating disorders
TL;DR: The Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-III-R (SCID and SCID II) was administered to 105 eating disorder in-patients in order to examine rates of comorbid psychiatric disorders and the chronological sequence in which these disorders developed.
Journal ArticleDOI
Perfectionism in Anorexia Nervosa: Variation by Clinical Subtype, Obsessionality, and Pathological Eating Behavior
Katherine A. Halmi,Suzanne R. Sunday,Michael Strober,Alan S. Kaplan,D. Blake Woodside,Manfred M. Fichter,Janet Treasure,Wade H. Berrettini,Walter H. Kaye +8 more
TL;DR: Data show that perfectionism is a robust, discriminating characteristic of anorexia nervosa and is likely to be one of a cluster of phenotypic trait variables associated with a genetic diathesis for this illness.
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Obsessions and compulsions in anorexia nervosa subtypes
Katherine A. Halmi,Suzanne R. Sunday,Kelly L. Klump,Michael Strober,James F. Leckman,Manfred M. Fichter,Allan S. Kaplan,Blake Woodside,Janet Treasure,Wade H. Berrettini,Mayadah Al Shabboat,Cynthia M. Bulik,Walter H. Kaye +12 more
TL;DR: Some common phenotype characteristics shared by most anorexia nervosa and OCD patients suggest these disorders may share common brain behavioral pathways, but the lack of complete overlap indicates they most likely have different loci of pathology within those pathways.
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The Yale-Brown-Cornell Eating Disorder Scale: development, use, reliability and validity
TL;DR: Initial findings showed excellent reliability and indications of validity for both the eight-item YBC-EDS and the set of six provisional items, which demonstrated aspects of convergent validity with other assessments of eating disorder symptomatology.
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More males seek treatment for eating disorders.
TL;DR: The similarities of core eating disorder psychopathology and comorbid illness in male and female patients encourage the continued use of similar detection and treatment strategies with both groups.