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Psychology

D-Index
56
Citations
13042
World Ranking
4191
National Ranking
2338

Overview

Amy B. Adler is affiliated with the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research in the United States. Their research portfolio spans multiple areas within psychology and health professions, emphasizing mental health and occupational well-being in military contexts.

Adler's work encompasses an extensive study of posttraumatic stress disorder research, resilience and mental health, healthcare professionals' stress and burnout, as well as suicide and self-harm studies. In addition, occupational health and performance, sleep and work-related fatigue, and employment and welfare studies are prominent topics in their research contributions.

Their main fields of study include Psychology with 127 publications and Health Professions with 58 publications. Subfields feature clinical psychology, experimental and cognitive psychology, occupational therapy, and social psychology, illustrating a broad interdisciplinary focus. Specifically, clinical psychology accounts for a significant portion of the work with 101 publications, while general health professions and other subfields complement the scope.

Amy B. Adler has published frequently in several scholarly venues, including:

  • Military Medicine (9 publications)
  • Current Psychiatry Reports (6 publications)
  • Occupational Health Science (5 publications)
  • Military Psychology (4 publications)
  • BMJ Military Health (3 publications)

Recent papers highlight their ongoing involvement in military mental health research. Notable publications include:

  • "Sleep leadership in the army: A group randomized trial" (2020), published in Sleep Health
  • "Magnitude of problematic anger and its predictors in the Millennium Cohort" (2020), published in BMC Public Health
  • "Addressing moral injury in the military" (2022), published in BMJ Military Health
  • "Hitting the mark: The influence of emotional culture on resilient performance" (2021), published in Journal of Applied Psychology
  • "Acute Stress Reaction in Combat: Emerging Evidence and Peer-Based Interventions" (2022), published in Current Psychiatry Reports

Adler maintains collaborative relationships with several frequent coauthors, including:

  • Ian A. Gutierrez (15 joint publications)
  • David Forbes (11 joint publications)
  • Cynthia A. LeardMann (9 joint publications)
  • Paul D. Bliese (8 joint publications)
  • Robert J. Ursano (7 joint publications)

Best Publications

  • Validating the Primary Care Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Screen and the Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Checklist with soldiers returning from combat.

    Paul D. Bliese;Kathleen M. Wright;Amy B. Adler;Oscar Cabrera

  • Deriving benefits from stressful events: the role of engagement in meaningful work and hardiness.

    Thomas W. Britt;Amy B. Adler;Paul T. Bartone

  • Early intervention for trauma: Current status and future directions.

    Brett T. Litz;Matt J. Gray;Richard A. Bryant;Amy B. Adler

  • Battlemind debriefing and battlemind training as early interventions with soldiers returning from Iraq: Randomization by platoon.

    Amy B. Adler;Paul D. Bliese;Dennis McGurk;Charles W. Hoge

  • Stigma, Negative Attitudes About Treatment, and Utilization of Mental Health Care Among Soldiers

    Paul Y. Kim;Thomas W. Britt;Robert P. Klocko;Lyndon A. Riviere

  • Dimensions of Psychological Stress in Peacekeeping Operations

    Paul T. Bartone;Amy B. Adler;Mark A. Vaitkus

  • The Impact of Deployment Length and Experience on the Well-Being of Male and Female Soldiers

    Amy B. Adler;Ann H. Huffman;Paul D. Bliese;Carl Andrew Castro

  • Insomnia as predictor versus outcome of PTSD and depression among Iraq combat veterans.

    Kathleen M. Wright;Thomas W. Britt;Thomas W. Britt;Paul D. Bliese;Amy B. Adler

  • Timing of postcombat mental health assessments.

    Paul D. Bliese;Kathleen M. Wright;Amy B. Adler;Jeffrey L. Thomas

  • Work gets unfair for the depressed: cross-lagged relations between organizational justice perceptions and depressive symptoms.

    Jessica Lang;Paul D. Bliese;Jonas W. B. Lang;Amy B. Adler

  • Stigma and barriers to care in soldiers postcombat.

    Kathleen M. Wright;Oscar A. Cabrera;Paul D. Bliese;Amy B. Adler

  • Self-Engagement, Stressors, and Health: A Longitudinal Study

    Thomas W. Britt;Carl Andrew Castro;Amy B. Adler

  • Heterogeneity in the course of posttraumatic stress disorder: trajectories of symptomatology.

    Benjamin D. Dickstein;Michael Suvak;Brett T. Litz;Amy B. Adler

  • Do stigma and other perceived barriers to mental health care differ across Armed Forces

    Matthew Gould;Amy Adler;Mark Zamorski;Carl Castro

  • Military hardiness as a buffer of psychological health on return from deployment.

    Carol A. Dolan;Amy B. Adler

  • Job demands and job performance: the mediating effect of psychological and physical strain and the moderating effect of role clarity.

    Jessica Lang;Jeffrey L. Thomas;Paul D. Bliese;Amy B. Adler

  • Correlates and consequences of morale versus depression under stressful conditions.

    Thomas W. Britt;James M. Dickinson;DeWayne Moore;Carl A. Castro

  • An Occupational Mental Health Model for the Military

    Amy B. Adler;Carl Andrew Castro

  • Mental health outcomes in US and UK military personnel returning from Iraq

    Josefin Sundin;Richard K. Herrell;Charles W. Hoge;Nicola T. Fear

  • A2 diagnostic criterion for combat-related posttraumatic stress disorder.

    Amy B. Adler;Kathleen M. Wright;Paul D. Bliese;Rachel Eckford

Frequent Co-Authors

Paul D. Bliese
Paul D. Bliese University of South Carolina
Jeffrey L. Thomas
Jeffrey L. Thomas United States Army Research Laboratory
Thomas W. Britt
Thomas W. Britt Clemson University
Paul T. Bartone
Paul T. Bartone National Defense University
Brett T. Litz
Brett T. Litz Boston University
Yair Bar-Haim
Yair Bar-Haim Tel Aviv University
DeWayne Moore
DeWayne Moore Clemson University
Michael K. Suvak
Michael K. Suvak Suffolk University
Richard A. Bryant
Richard A. Bryant University of New South Wales
David Forbes
David Forbes University of Melbourne

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