Publications by authors named "Trevor James Swanson"

Article Synopsis
  • Latines experience higher rates of binge eating disorders than non-Latine whites, and this study aimed to explore the impact of discrimination and acculturative stress on binge eating among them.
  • The research involved 2,550 Latine participants and used advanced statistical modeling to analyze factors related to binge eating.
  • Findings revealed that discrimination was directly linked to binge eating, while acculturative stress, family cohesion, and social support did not significantly influence binge eating behaviors.
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The Clinical Impairment Assessment (CIA) is a widely used self-report measure of the psychosocial impairment associated with eating-disorder symptoms. Past studies recommended a global CIA score of 16 to identify clinically significant impairment associated with a probable eating disorder (ED). However, to date, research on the properties of the CIA has been conducted in majority-women samples.

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Previous research has failed to find differences in eating disorder and general psychopathology and impairment between people with sub- and full-threshold bulimia nervosa (BN). The purpose of the current study was to test the validity of the distinction between sub- and full-threshold BN and to determine the frequency of objective binge episodes and inappropriate compensatory behaviors that would best distinguish between sub- and full-BN. Community-recruited adults (83.

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Adolescence is a common period for eating disorder (ED) onset. The availability of psychometrically sound measures of ED psychopathology enables clinicians to accurately assess symptoms and monitor treatment outcomes continuously from adolescence and adulthood. The purpose of this study was to assess if the Eating Pathology Symptoms Inventory (EPSI) is invariant across adolescents and adults.

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