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Tracey D. Wade

Researcher at Flinders University

Publications -  298
Citations -  13420

Tracey D. Wade is an academic researcher from Flinders University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Eating disorders & Bulimia nervosa. The author has an hindex of 56, co-authored 266 publications receiving 10825 citations. Previous affiliations of Tracey D. Wade include University of Queensland & University of South Australia.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Changes in genetic and environmental influences on disordered eating between early and late adolescence: a longitudinal twin study.

TL;DR: Two-thirds of the heritable influence contributing to DE in late adolescence was unique to this age group, and independent sources of genetic risk as well as environmental influences are likely to be related in part to peer teasing, appear key antecedents in growth of DE.
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Depression as a moderator of benefit from Media Smart: a school-based eating disorder prevention program.

TL;DR: Investigation if baseline depression moderated response to Media Smart, an 8-lesson school-based program previously found to achieve a long-term risk reduction effect in young adolescents found a reduction in eating disorder risk factors for high-depression participants and a reduced rate of growth in risk factor scores for low-Depression participants.
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Measuring perfectionism in children: a systematic review of the mental health literature.

TL;DR: The validity and reliability of the measures currently being used to measure perfectionism in children under the age of 15 were examined, and there was evidence supporting the existence of both perfectionistic striving and perfectionistic concerns in this population.
BookDOI

Brief Cognitive Behavioural Therapy for Non-Underweight Patients : CBT-T for Eating Disorders

TL;DR: Brief Cognitive Behavioural Therapy for Non-Underweight Patients (CBT-T) as discussed by the authors is a 10-session approach to CBT that is suitable for all eating disorder patients who are not severely underweight, helping adults and young adults to overcome their eating disorder.
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The genetic epidemiology of body attitudes, the attitudinal component of body image in women.

TL;DR: Findings support the notion that: (i) body image is a multidimensional concept; (ii) it is relatively independent of BMI; and (iii) both genetic and non-shared environment are influential determinants of body attitudes.