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D-Index & Metrics

Psychology

D-Index
36
Citations
16338
World Ranking
9310
National Ranking
4918

Overview

Susan M. Czajkowski is affiliated with the National Institutes of Health in the United States. Their research primarily focuses on medicine, with significant contributions across several subfields including physiology, public health, environmental and occupational health, general health professions, experimental and cognitive psychology, and sociology and political science.

Their main research topics encompass dietary effects on health, obesity, physical activity and diet, circadian rhythm and melatonin, climate change and health impacts, climate change communication and perception, sleep and related disorders, and health and lifestyle studies.

Recent publications by Czajkowski include:

  • "Perspective: Time-Restricted Eating Compared with Caloric Restriction: Potential Facilitators and Barriers of Long-Term Weight Loss Maintenance," 2021, Advances in Nutrition
  • "Behavioral Research in Cancer Prevention and Control: Emerging Challenges and Opportunities," 2021, JNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute
  • "A qualitative exploration of facilitators and barriers of adherence to time-restricted eating," 2022, Appetite
  • "From ideas to interventions: A review and comparison of frameworks used in early phase behavioral translation research," 2021, Health Psychology
  • "Circadian timing of eating and BMI among adults in the American Time Use Survey," 2021, International Journal of Obesity

They have frequently collaborated with a number of co-authors, including:

  • Karina W. Davidson
  • Simon Bacon
  • Tracey A. Revenson
  • John Ruiz
  • Sydney O'Connor

Their work has been published repeatedly in several venues, the most frequent being:

  • Health Psychology
  • UNC Libraries
  • JNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute
  • Obesity Reviews
  • Annals of Behavioral Medicine

Best Publications

  • Enhancing Treatment Fidelity in Health Behavior Change Studies: Best Practices and Recommendations From the NIH Behavior Change Consortium.

    Albert J. Bellg;Belinda Borrelli;Barbara Resnick;Jacki Hecht

  • Effects of treating depression and low perceived social support on clinical events after myocardial infarction: the Enhancing Recovery in Coronary Heart Disease Patients (ENRICHD) Randomized Trial.

    Lisa F Berkman;James Blumenthal;Matthew Burg;Robert M Carney

  • Depression, Heart Rate Variability, and Acute Myocardial Infarction

    Robert M. Carney;James A. Blumenthal;Phyllis K. Stein;Lana Watkins

  • From ideas to efficacy: The ORBIT model for developing behavioral treatments for chronic diseases.

    Susan M. Czajkowski;Lynda H. Powell;Nancy Adler;Sylvie Naar-King

  • A new tool to assess treatment fidelity and evaluation of treatment fidelity across 10 years of health behavior research

    Belinda Borrelli;Deborah Sepinwall;Denise Ernst;Albert J. Bellg

  • Self-report measures of medication adherence behavior: recommendations on optimal use

    Michael J. Stirratt;Jacqueline Dunbar-Jacob;Heidi M. Crane;Jane M. Simoni

  • A short social support measure for patients recovering from myocardial infarction: the ENRICHD Social Support Inventory.

    Pamela H. Mitchell;Lynda Powell;James Blumenthal;Jennifer Norten

  • Medication adherence: a call for action.

    Hayden B. Bosworth;Hayden B. Bosworth;Bradi B. Granger;Phil Mendys;Ralph Brindis

  • PROMIS measures of pain, fatigue, negative affect, physical function, and social function demonstrated clinical validity across a range of chronic conditions

    Karon F. Cook;Sally E. Jensen;Benjamin D. Schalet;Jennifer L. Beaumont

  • The NIH Science of Behavior Change Program: Transforming the science through a focus on mechanisms of change.

    Lisbeth Nielsen;Melissa Riddle;Jonathan W. King

  • Depression and late mortality after myocardial infarction in the Enhancing Recovery in Coronary Heart Disease (ENRICHD) study

    Robert M. Carney;James A. Blumenthal;Kenneth E. Freedland;Marston Youngblood

  • Low heart rate variability and the effect of depression on post-myocardial infarction mortality.

    Robert M. Carney;James A. Blumenthal;Kenneth E. Freedland;Phyllis K. Stein

  • Depression as a risk factor for mortality after acute myocardial infarction

    Robert M Carney;James A Blumenthal;Diane Catellier;Diane Catellier;Kenneth E Freedland

  • Maintenance of dietary behavior change.

    Shiriki K. Kumanyika;Deborah Bowen;Barbara J. Rolls;Linda Van Horn

  • Social support and cardiovascular disease

    Sally A. Shumaker;Susan M. Czajkowski

  • Examples of implementation and evaluation of treatment fidelity in the BCC studies: Where we are and where we need to go

    Barbara Resnick;Albert J. Bellg;Belinda Borrelli;Carol DeFrancesco

  • The selection of comparators for randomized controlled trials of health-related behavioral interventions: recommendations of an NIH expert panel.

    Kenneth E Freedland;Abby C King;Walter T Ambrosius;Evan Mayo-Wilson

  • Centralized, Stepped, Patient Preference–Based Treatment for Patients With Post–Acute Coronary Syndrome Depression: CODIACS Vanguard Randomized Controlled Trial

    Karina W. Davidson;J. Thomas Bigger;Matthew M. Burg;Robert M. Carney

  • The Accumulating Data to Optimally Predict Obesity Treatment (ADOPT) Core Measures Project: Rationale and Approach.

    Paul S. MacLean;Alexander J. Rothman;Holly L. Nicastro;Susan M. Czajkowski

  • Spirituality, religion, and clinical outcomes in patients recovering from an acute myocardial infarction.

    James A. Blumenthal;Michael A. Babyak;Gail Ironson;Carl Thoresen

  • Low perceived social support and post-myocardial infarction prognosis in the enhancing recovery in coronary heart disease clinical trial: the effects of treatment.

    Matthew M. Burg;John Barefoot;Lisa Berkman;Diane J. Catellier

Frequent Co-Authors

Kenneth E. Freedland
Kenneth E. Freedland Washington University in St. Louis
Matthew M. Burg
Matthew M. Burg Yale University
Lisa F. Berkman
Lisa F. Berkman Harvard University
Karina W. Davidson
Karina W. Davidson Feinstein Institute for Medical Research
Elissa S. Epel
Elissa S. Epel University of California, San Francisco
Gail Ironson
Gail Ironson University of Miami
Belinda Borrelli
Belinda Borrelli Boston University
Traci Mann
Traci Mann University of Minnesota
Viola Vaccarino
Viola Vaccarino Emory University
Cary R. Savage
Cary R. Savage University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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