J
Julia B. Frank
Researcher at George Washington University
Publications - 27
Citations - 1269
Julia B. Frank is an academic researcher from George Washington University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Student affairs & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 24 publications receiving 1225 citations. Previous affiliations of Julia B. Frank include University of Maryland, Baltimore.
Papers
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Synopsis of Psychiatry: Behavioral Sciences, Clinical Psychiatry
TL;DR: The decline of psychoanalysis and the "remedicalization of psychiatry have helped reopen the dialogue among psychiatrists, their patients, and their medical peers, and the availability of psychiatric textbooks that synthesize (or gloss over) the internal contradictions of current psychiatric theory and present.
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Vital Involvement in Old Age
TL;DR: In Vital Involvement in Old Age, the three investigators present the results of their interviews with 29 men and women, aged 75 to 95 years, first encountered as parents of children studied developmentally since the 1930s.
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Medical Students’ Exposure to and Attitudes About Drug Company Interactions: A National Survey
Frederick S. Sierles,Amy C. Brodkey,Lynn M. Cleary,Frederick A. McCurdy,Matthew Mintz,Julia B. Frank,D. Joanne Lynn,Jason Chao,Bruce Z. Morgenstern,William B. Shore,John L. Woodard +10 more
TL;DR: In this article, a survey of third-year medical students' exposure to and attitudes about drug company interactions was conducted to explore their exposure and response to drug company interaction with medical students.
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The Wisdom of the Ego
TL;DR: George Vaillant, a widely acclaimed researcher on adult development and on alcoholism, is one of a handful of master clinician-researchers whose work enhances the authors' understanding not only of disease, but of human character in all its vulnerability and resilience.
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Review of psychological issues in victims of domestic violence seen in emergency settings.
Julia B. Frank,Maria F. Rodowski +1 more
TL;DR: The known characteristics of ongoing relationships in which one partner exerts coercive control over another are reviewed, with emphasis on the effects of abuse on the victim's physical and mental health.