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Marjorie A. Bowman

Researcher at American Board of Family Medicine

Publications -  252
Citations -  6342

Marjorie A. Bowman is an academic researcher from American Board of Family Medicine. The author has contributed to research in topics: Specialty & Health care. The author has an hindex of 34, co-authored 234 publications receiving 5852 citations. Previous affiliations of Marjorie A. Bowman include Georgetown University Medical Center & Georgetown University.

Papers
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Book ChapterDOI

The Second Shift

TL;DR: Female and male physicians share many joys and stresses, but women physicians may be more involved with the tasks of domestic life.
Journal ArticleDOI

Strength of Recommendation Taxonomy (SORT): A Patient-Centered Approach to Grading Evidence in the Medical Literature

TL;DR: A new grading scale that will be used by several family medicine and primary care journals and allowing readers to learn one taxonomy that will apply to many sources of evidence is developed, called the Strength of Recommendation Taxonomy.
Journal Article

Strength of recommendation taxonomy (SORT): a patient-centered approach to grading evidence in the medical literature.

TL;DR: The Strength of Recommendation Taxonomy (SOT) as mentioned in this paper is based on the information mastery framework, which emphasizes the use of patient-oriented outcomes that measure changes in morbidity or mortality.
Journal ArticleDOI

A review of the evidence for the use of phytoestrogens as a replacement for traditional estrogen replacement therapy.

TL;DR: There is insufficient evidence to recommend the use of phy toestrogens in place of traditional ERT, or to make recommendations to women about specific phytoestrogen products.
Journal ArticleDOI

Symptom Burden Among Cancer Survivors: Impact of Age and Comorbidity

TL;DR: The symptom burden among cancer survivors on a population level is substantial and can be impacted by other comorbidities, and engaging primary care physicians in the design, testing, and implementation of effective interventions is important to reduce the symptom burden.