David Muller
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
38 Papers
121 Citations
David Muller is an academic researcher from Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. The author has contributed to research in topics: Curriculum & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 36 publications. Previous affiliations of David Muller include Harvard University.
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Papers
Thou Shalt Not Be Aware: Society's Betrayal of the Child
TL;DR: Although comprehensive, this monograph does have its shortcomings, it does not address where skills for community living would best be taught: in preparatory residential facilities or in the community itself.
232
Life-Threatening Danger and Suppression of Attention Bias to Threat
Yair Bar-Haim,Yael Holoshitz,Sharon Eldar,Tahl I. Frenkel,David Muller,Dennis S. Charney,Daniel S. Pine,Nathan A. Fox,M. A. Ilan Wald +8 more
TL;DR: These data challenge current thinking about the role of attention in stress responding and suggest attentional threat avoidance may reduce the acute impact of imminent threat, but this may come at a price in terms of an elevated risk for psychopathology.
194
Resilience in the third year of medical school: a prospective study of the associations between stressful events occurring during clinical rotations and student well-being.
Margaret E.M. Haglund,Marije aan het Rot,Nicole Cooper,Paul S. Nestadt,David Muller,Steven M. Southwick,Dennis S. Charney +6 more
TL;DR: Trauma exposure was common but not associated with poor outcomes by year's end, which suggests that students were resilient, Nonetheless, unprofessional behavior by resident and attending physicians might have adverse effects on the well-being of students.
188
Attention bias away from threat during life threatening danger predicts PTSD symptoms at one-year follow-up.
Ilan Wald,Tomer Shechner,Shani Bitton,Y. Holoshitz,Dennis S. Charney,David Muller,Nathan A. Fox,Daniel S. Pine,Yair Bar-Haim +8 more
TL;DR: In the exposed group, stronger attentional threat avoidance during stress exposure predicted higher levels of PTSD symptoms 1 year later, which suggests that neurocognitive measures may index risk for PTSD.
108
A Multidisciplinary Program for Delivering Primary Care to the Underserved Urban Homebound: Looking Back, Moving Forward
TL;DR: Home‐based primary care programs can coordinate and provide multiple medical conditions requiring a team of caregivers to provide adequate care, but traditionally they have been small because there has been little institutional support for growth.
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