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Judith Wrubel

Researcher at University of California, San Francisco

Publications -  33
Citations -  2578

Judith Wrubel is an academic researcher from University of California, San Francisco. The author has contributed to research in topics: Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) & Health care. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 33 publications receiving 2459 citations.

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Book

The Primacy of Caring: Stress and Coping in Health and Illness

TL;DR: This book discusses Coping with Illness Across the Adult Lifespan, a Phenomenological View of Stress and Coping, and the Primacy of Caring.
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HIV-related stigma: Adapting a theoretical framework for use in India☆

TL;DR: It is suggested that enacted and vicarious stigma influenced felt normative stigma; that enacted, felt normative, andinternalized stigma were associated with higher levels of depression; and that the associations of depression with felt normative and internalized forms of stigma were mediated by the use of coping strategies designed to avoid disclosure of one's HIV serostatus.
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Body Awareness: a phenomenological inquiry into the common ground of mind-body therapies

TL;DR: To better understand the conceptualization of body awareness in mind-body therapies, leading practitioners and teaching faculty of these approaches were invited as well as their patients to participate in focus groups, and the qualitative analysis of these focus groups elucidated the common ground of their understanding of bodyawareness.
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Skilled clinical knowledge: the value of perceptual awareness.

Patricia Benner, +1 more
- 01 May 1982 - 
TL;DR: Strategies for clinical knowledge development, for documenting, conserving, and enhancing the unique knowledge of the experienced clinician are presented.
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Disclosure and nondisclosure among people newly diagnosed with HIV: an analysis from a stress and coping perspective.

TL;DR: Four main approaches to HIV disclosure were identified that revealed distinct differences in how participants appraised disclosure, whether disclosure was experienced as stressful, and whether disclosure or nondisclosure functioned as a way of coping with an HIV diagnosis.