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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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Developing shared understandings of recovery and care: a qualitative study of women with eating disorders who resist therapeutic care

TL;DR: A shared understanding between patients and health professionals about the function of the eating disorder may avoid conflict and provide a pathway to treatment and the construction of care by patients should not be taken for granted in therapeutic guidelines.
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Body image flexibility: A predictor and moderator of outcome in transdiagnostic outpatient eating disorder treatment

TL;DR: Higher body image flexibility predicted lower global eating disorder psychopathology at every assessment point, followed by body image avoidance.
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Investigation of quality of the parental relationship as a risk factor for subclinical bulimia nervosa.

TL;DR: Poorer quality of the marital relationship predicted the presence of subclinical bulimia nervosa using both mother's and father's reports, and the notion that a conflictual and distant marital relationship can, at least partially, act as an environmental risk factor for SBN is supportive.
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Assessing the relevance of the hopelessness theory of depression to women with disordered eating.

TL;DR: Investigating the relevance of the hopelessness theory of depression to women with partial-syndrome eating disorders found the depressed group showed the greatest tendency to attribute the causes of negative life events to internal factors, while the control group displayed similar styles of attribution.
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Identifying research priorities in eating disorders: A Delphi study building consensus across clinicians, researchers, consumers, and carers in Australia.

TL;DR: Using the Delphi expert consensus method resulted in a collaborative consensus driven eating disorders research agenda for the Australian context and forms a model upon which other countries may also develop their funding priorities.