| July 8, 2005
Penn Professor Receives Gold
Medal for
Distinguished Academic Accomplishments
(Philadelphia, PA) - Albert J. Stunkard, MD,
founding director of the Weight and Eating Disorders
Program at the University of Pennsylvania School
of Medicine and Emeritus Professor of Psychiatry,
was awarded the Gold Medal for Distinguished Academic
Accomplishment from Columbia University’s College
of Physicians and Surgeons, where he earned his medical
degree in 1945. The medal, which is presented by Columbia’s
Alumni Association, is their highest honor in recognizing
outstanding achievement.
For more than 50 years, Stunkard has been a pioneer
in the field of obesity and eating disorders. He was
the first to describe the powerful environmental influence
on obesity of social class and, through the study of
identical twins separated at birth, of the even greater
power of genetics. He has developed a widely-used questionnaire
to assess the psychological aspects of eating behavior.
Dr. Stunkard helped to define behavioral medicine as
a field of intellectual endeavor and was an early President
of the Society for Behavioral Medicine.
In the 1950s, Stunkard was the first to describe Binge
Eating Disorder and the Night Eating Syndrome (NES),
a condition that compels people to eat well into the
evening and to wake and consume snacks to get back to
sleep at night. Together with colleague Kelly Allison,
PhD, Stunkard recently published Overcoming Night
Eating Syndrome: A Step-by Step Guide to Breaking the
Cycle (New Harbinger Publications, Inc. 2004).
His work has not only added significantly to our understanding
of eating disorders, but it has altered public perception
of such disorders, making it possible for sufferers
to receive more effective treatment.
Stunkard served as Chairman of the Department of Psychiatry
at the University of Pennsylvania for 11 years and also
served as President of the American Association of Chairmen
of Departments of Psychiatry, the Association for Research
in Nervous and Mental Diseases, the American Psychosomatic
Society, and the Academy of Behavioral Medicine Research.
Stunkard has authored over 400 publications, mostly
in the field of obesity, and his research has been supported
for 50 years by the National Institutes of Health. He
also serves on the editorial boards of seven journals
in the fields of nutrition and behavioral medicine.
For
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here.
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