Madison Sunnquist

Madison Lindsay Sunnquist, B.S., M.A., is a Doctoral Candidate and Graduate Research Assistant in Clinical-Community Psychology from DePaul University, Center for Community Research, Chicago, Illinois, USA.

Awards

 * 2014, Junior Investigator Award to encourage young CFS/FM researchers in recognition of their work awarded by IACFSME.

Thesis

 * 26 July 2016, "A Reexamination of the Cognitive Behavioral Model of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome: Investigating the Cogency of the Model’s Behavioral Pathway" "'Abstract: Cognitive behavioral theories of chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) assert that cognitions and behaviors perpetuate the fatigue and impairment that individuals with CFS experience (Wessely, Butler, Chalder, & David, 1991). Vercoulen and colleagues (1998) utilized structural equation modeling to empirically develop a cognitive behavioral model of CFS. The resulting model indicated that attributing symptoms to a physical cause, focusing on symptoms, and feeling less control over symptoms were associated with increased fatigue. Additionally, individuals who attributed symptoms to a physical cause reported lower activity levels and more fatigue and impairment. However, in an attempt to replicate this model, Song and Jason (2005) demonstrated that the model displayed inadequate fit statistics for a well-characterized group of individuals with CFS; the model resulted in appropriate fit for individuals with chronic fatigue from psychiatric conditions. Despite uncertainty surrounding the model’s validity, it continues to be cited to support the application of cognitive behavioral and graded exercise therapies to individuals with CFS (White et al., 2011). The current study utilized second-stage conditional process modeling (i.e., moderated mediation) to reexamine the behavioral pathway of the Vercoulen et al. (1998) model. This pathway is characterized by the association among causal attribution for symptoms, activity level, and fatigue and impairment. The use of a large sample allowed for a robust examination of the pathway, and moderators isolated potential factors that contributed to previous studies’ discrepant results. Findings were generally inconsistent with the Vercoulen et al. (1998) model. Results indicated that individuals did not reduce their activity level due to illness beliefs. Although activity level and impairment were significantly correlated, this correlation decreased as case definition stringency increased. Furthermore, a canonical correlation analysis demonstrated that activity level, impairment, and fatigue could be conceptualized as indicators of illness severity. Rather than implicating activity level as the cause of fatigue and impairment, the relation among these variables may be due to their shared association with the latent construct of illness severity. This study represents the second attempt to replicate the Vercoulen et al. (1998) model; neither the Song and Jason (2005) nor the current study resulted in findings consistent with the original model. As this model provides the theoretical foundation for cognitive behavioral and graded exercise treatments for ME and CFS, these failed replication attempts support patient-expressed concerns about the appropriateness and efficacy of these treatments.'"

Book chapter

 * 2013, The implications of sensitization and kindling for chronic fatigue syndrome

Notable studies and articles

 * 2018, A reexamination of the cognitive behavioral model of chronic fatigue syndrome (ABSTRACT)
 * 2017, Are current chronic fatigue syndrome criteria diagnosing different disease phenotypes? (FULL TEXT)
 * 2017, Approaching recovery from myalgic encephalomyelitis and chronic fatigue syndrome: Challenges to consider in research and practice (ABSTRACT)
 * 2017, Differentiating Multiple Sclerosis from Myalgic Encephalomyelitis and Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (FREE ACCESS/FULL TEXT)
 * 2017, A Comparison of Case Definitions for Myalgic Encephalomyelitis and Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (FREE ACCESS/FULL TEXT)
 * 2017, Clinical criteria versus a possible research case definition in chronic fatigue syndrome/myalgic encephalomyelitis (ABSTRACT)
 * 2017, A Prospective Study of Infectious Mononucleosis in College Students (FREE ACCESS/FULL TEXT)
 * 2016, Case definitions integrating empiric and consensus perspectives (ABSTRACT)
 * 2016, Comparing the DePaul Symptom Questionnaire with physician assessments: a preliminary study (ABSTRACT)
 * 2016, Housebound versus nonhousebound patients with myalgic encephalomyelitis and chronic fatigue syndrome (FREE ACCESS/FULL TEXT)
 * 2016, Deconstructing post-exertional malaise: An exploratory factor analysis (ABSTRACT)
 * 2016, Identifying Key Symptoms Differentiating Myalgic Encephalomyelitis and Chronic Fatigue Syndrome from Multiple Sclerosis (FREE ACCESS/FULL TEXT)
 * 2016, Are Myalgic Encephalomyelitis and chronic fatigue syndrome different illnesses? A preliminary analysis (FULL TEXT)
 * 2015, Unintended Consequences of not Specifying Exclusionary Illnesses for Systemic Exertion Intolerance Disease (FULL TEXT)
 * 2015, Reflections on the Institute of Medicine’s systemic exertion intolerance disease (FULL ARTICLE)
 * 2015, Chronic fatigue syndrome versus systemic exertion intolerance disease (ABSTRACT)
 * 2015, Defining Essential Features of Myalgic Encephalomyelitis and Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ABSTRACT)
 * 2015, Comparing and contrasting consensus versus empirical domains (ABSTRACT)
 * 2015, Test–retest reliability of the DePaul Symptom Questionnaire (ABSTRACT)
 * 2015, Factor Analysis of the DePaul Symptom Questionnaire: Identifying Core Domains (FULL TEXT)
 * 2015, Chronic fatigue syndrome and myalgic encephalomyelitis: towards an empirical case definition (FULL TEXT)
 * 2014, Examining case definition criteria for chronic fatigue syndrome and myalgic encephalomyelitis (FULL TEXT)
 * 2013, Energy conservation/envelope theory interventions (FULL TEXT)
 * 2013, Contrasting chronic fatigue syndrome versus myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ABSTRACT)

Online presence

 * ResearchGate
 * LinkedIn
 * Google Scholar