Publications by authors named "Sarah I Leonard"

Article Synopsis
  • Disordered eating in young teens can lead to serious health issues, and some groups, like LGBTQ+ and minority adolescents, may face higher risks.
  • Researchers studied data from almost 9,400 kids aged 10-14 to see how sexual, gender, and racial identities were linked to unhealthy eating habits over two years.
  • The study found that gay/bisexual and transgender teens had higher chances of disordered eating behaviors, suggesting that healthcare providers should pay more attention to these groups when screening for eating issues.
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Purpose: Sleep is essential to adolescent development. Sexual and gender minority (SGM; e.g.

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Weight stigma is associated with poor mental and emotional health and may be especially harmful to sexual and gender minority (SGM) individuals due to co-occurring minority stress. The literature on this topic has not been synthesized. We conducted a scoping review of the literature on weight stigma and mental and emotional health among SGM individuals to synthesize findings, highlight gaps, and identify clinical and research implications.

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Black youth and rural adolescents are two groups who experience asthma disparities. Racism and discrimination in health care likely lead to group-based (systems-level) medical mistrust for some adolescents. Group-based medical mistrust, one pathway by which racism drives health inequities, is associated with poorer outcomes for patients with chronic conditions.

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Rural adolescents with asthma are a disparate group. Self-management is essential to asthma control. We describe asthma knowledge, self-efficacy, and self-management behaviors among 198 rural adolescents with poorly controlled asthma, exploring demographic differences; we also test the application of Social Cognitive Theory to asthma self-management examining if self-efficacy mediates associations between knowledge and self-management.

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Background: Adolescent asthma is highly prevalent and frequently uncontrolled despite control being achievable with good self-management. Anxiety, depression, and stress are associated with worse asthma outcomes, and may impact self-management; no previous review has examined this relationship.

Aim: This scoping review assessed the nature of the current literature on mental health and asthma self-management among adolescents ages 11 to 24 and synthesized their relationships.

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Background: Rural adolescents are vulnerable to asthma; good self-care can reduce morbidity. The subtypes of anxiety (eg, asthma-related, generalized) may have differential associations with asthma self-care. Low self-efficacy, a determinant of behavior, is associated with increased anxiety.

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