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
Psychosocial correlates of sleep quality and architecture in women with metastatic breast cancer
Arianna Aldridge-Gerry,Jamie M. Zeitzer,Jamie M. Zeitzer,Oxana Palesh,Booil Jo,Bita Nouriani,Eric Neri,David Spiegel +7 more
TL;DR: Women with MBC and greater symptoms of depression had increased light sleep and reduced SWS and REM sleep, and single women had worse sleep quality and greater light sleep than married counterparts.
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Differential hypnotic responsivity of smokers, phobics, chronic-pain control patients: A failure to confirm.
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Treatment of Secondary Hyperparathyroidism: Results of a Phase 2 Trial Evaluating an Intravenous Peptide Agonist of the Calcium-Sensing Receptor.
David A. Bushinsky,Geoffrey A. Block,Kevin J. Martin,Gregory Bell,Saling Huang,Yan Sun,David Spiegel,Liron Walsh,T. Christian H. Mix,Reshma Kewalramani +9 more
TL;DR: AMG416 was well tolerated and appears to be an effective agent for the treatment of SHPT in patients on hemodialysis.
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Effects of age on responsiveness to adjunct hypnotic analgesia during invasive medical procedures.
Susan K. Lutgendorf,Elvira V. Lang,Kevin S. Berbaum,Daniel W. Russell,Michael L. Berbaum,Henrietta L. Logan,Eric G. Benotsch,Sebastian Schulz-Stübner,Derek G. Turesky,David Spiegel +9 more
TL;DR: Older patients are hypnotizable and increasing age does not appear to mitigate the usefulness of hypnotic analgesia during invasive medical procedures.
Journal ArticleDOI
Training versus treating the psychiatric resident.
David Spiegel,Henry Grunebaum +1 more
TL;DR: The tendency to confound personal and professional issues in supervision is examined in the light of institutional pressures for control of psychotherapists in training.