D
David Spiegel
Researcher at Stanford University
Publications - 838
Citations - 50967
David Spiegel is an academic researcher from Stanford University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cancer & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 106, co-authored 733 publications receiving 46276 citations. Previous affiliations of David Spiegel include Tel Aviv University & University of Adelaide.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Real-World Evaluation of Patiromer for the Treatment of Hyperkalemia in Hemodialysis Patients.
Csaba P. Kovesdy,Christopher G. Rowan,Ansgar Conrad,David Spiegel,Jeanene Fogli,Nina Oestreicher,Jeffrey J. Connaire,Wolfgang C. Winkelmayer +7 more
TL;DR: Patiromer initiators receiving chronic hemodialysis had comparatively more severe, uncontrolled baseline hyperkalemia and medication order data show long-term patiromer use was associated with significantly reduced K+.
Journal ArticleDOI
Fatigue and weight loss predict survival on circadian chemotherapy for metastatic colorectal cancer.
Pasquale F. Innominato,Sylvie Giacchetti,Thierry Moreau,Georg A. Bjarnason,Rune Smaaland,Christian Focan,Carlo Garufi,Stefano Iacobelli,Marco Tampellini,Salvatore Tumolo,Carlos Carvalho,Abdoulaye Karaboué,Antoine Poncet,Antoine Poncet,David Spiegel,Francis Lévi +15 more
TL;DR: The authors hypothesized that the early occurrence of chemotherapy‐induced symptoms correlated with circadian disruption would selectively hinder the efficacy of chronotherapy.
Journal ArticleDOI
Can psychotherapy prolong cancer survival
TL;DR: Evidence that Type A personality style predicts vulnerability to heart disease~ and that relaxation training is an extremely effective treatment for mild hypertension \ provides support for the idea of a mind-body relationship that goes in two directions.
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Minding the body: psychotherapy and cancer survival.
TL;DR: Evidence from 15 RCTs indicates that effective psychosocial support improves quantity as well as quality of life with cancer, and there is evidence that chronic depression predicts poorer prognosis with cancer.
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Recent Stressful Life Events, Sexual Revictimization, and Their Relationship With Traumatic Stress Symptoms Among Women Sexually Abused in Childhood
Catherine C. Classen,Ruth Nevo,Cheryl Koopman,Kirsten Nevill-Manning,Cheryl Gore-Felton,Deborah S. Rose,David Spiegel +6 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a cross-sectional study examined whether previous life stressors are associated with current traumatic stress symptoms in women who were sexually abused in childhood and found that sexual revictimization was associated with trauma-related symptoms but not PTSD symptoms or ASD symptoms.