2021
Disordered eating following bariatric surgery: a review of measurement and conceptual considerations
Ivezaj V, Carr MM, Brode C, Devlin M, Heinberg LJ, Kalarchian MA, Sysko R, Williams-Kerver G, Mitchell JE. Disordered eating following bariatric surgery: a review of measurement and conceptual considerations. Surgery For Obesity And Related Diseases 2021, 17: 1510-1520. PMID: 34083136, PMCID: PMC8865052, DOI: 10.1016/j.soard.2021.03.008.Peer-Reviewed Original Research
2020
Examining the construct validity of food addiction severity specifiers
Wiedemann AA, Carr MM, Ivezaj V, Barnes RD. Examining the construct validity of food addiction severity specifiers. Eating And Weight Disorders - Studies On Anorexia, Bulimia And Obesity 2020, 26: 1503-1509. PMID: 32725535, PMCID: PMC7855002, DOI: 10.1007/s40519-020-00957-w.Peer-Reviewed Original Research
2019
Psychometric properties of the eating loss of control scale among postbariatric patients
Carr MM, Lawson JL, Ivezaj V, Blomquist KK, Grilo CM. Psychometric properties of the eating loss of control scale among postbariatric patients. Surgery For Obesity And Related Diseases 2019, 15: 1829-1835. PMID: 31494065, PMCID: PMC6834893, DOI: 10.1016/j.soard.2019.06.039.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAdultBariatric SurgeryBulimiaFeeding and Eating DisordersFeeding BehaviorFemaleHumansMaleMiddle AgedPsychometricsConceptsBariatric surgery patientsPostbariatric patientsSurgery patientsPostoperative bariatric surgery patientsAcademic medical centerGood construct validityConstruct validityExploratory factor analysisBariatric surgeryBariatric patientsAlternative factor solutionsMedical CenterTreatment-seeking adultsPatientsControl eatingAlternative factor structuresFactor 1Confirmatory factor analysisFactor 2Nonclinical groupPsychometric propertiesFactor structureControl ScalePsychometric examinationExamining Sleep Quality Following Sleeve Gastrectomy Among Patients with Loss-of-Control Eating
Lawson JL, Wiedemann AA, Carr MM, Ivezaj V, Duffy AJ, Grilo CM. Examining Sleep Quality Following Sleeve Gastrectomy Among Patients with Loss-of-Control Eating. Obesity Surgery 2019, 29: 3264-3270. PMID: 31197602, PMCID: PMC6800576, DOI: 10.1007/s11695-019-03981-7.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsBariatric SurgeryFeeding and Eating DisordersGastrectomyHumansObesityPostoperative ComplicationsQuality of LifeSleepSleep Wake DisordersWeight LossConceptsSleeve gastrectomy patientsExcess weight lossEating Disorder Examination-Bariatric Surgery Version interviewEating-disorder psychopathologyGastrectomy patientsSleep qualitySleeve gastrectomyNight eatingGreater eating-disorder psychopathologyPost-operative weight lossControl eatingWeight lossConclusionsPoor sleep qualityPoorer weight outcomesHealth-related qualityPoor sleep qualityEating Disorder FeaturesMental functioningBariatric patientsSurgical outcomesClinical correlatesWeight outcomesPhysical functioning problemsSleep problemsPatients
2016
Internalized weight bias mediates the relationship between depressive symptoms and disordered eating behavior among women who think they are overweight
Sienko RM, Saules KK, Carr MM. Internalized weight bias mediates the relationship between depressive symptoms and disordered eating behavior among women who think they are overweight. Eating Behaviors 2016, 22: 141-144. PMID: 27289519, DOI: 10.1016/j.eatbeh.2016.06.002.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAdultBody ImageBody Mass IndexBody WeightDepressionEatingFeeding and Eating DisordersFemaleHumansOverweightStudentsUniversitiesYoung AdultConceptsInternalized weight biasWeight Bias Internalization ScaleWeight biasMediation analysisEating Disorder Examination QuestionnaireUndergraduate psychology coursesDisorder Examination QuestionnaireDepressive symptomsActual weight statusMaladaptive approachesPsychology courseDisorder symptomsInternalization ScaleExamination QuestionnaireCollege womenBody mass indexWeight statusDepression screenerMass indexBiasWeight controlRelationshipEatingSymptomsBehavior