2022 - Research.com Best Female Scientist Award
Member of the Association of American Physicians
Her primary areas of study are Internal medicine, Prospective cohort study, Depression, Cardiology and Coronary artery disease. Her Internal medicine study incorporates themes from Endocrinology and Surgery. The various areas that Mary A. Whooley examines in her Prospective cohort study study include Odds ratio, Cohort study, Confidence interval, Circulatory system and Disease.
Mary A. Whooley combines subjects such as Cross-sectional study, Heart disease and Risk factor with her study of Depression. Her work is dedicated to discovering how Cardiology, Body mass index are connected with Logistic regression and other disciplines. Her work carried out in the field of Coronary artery disease brings together such families of science as Occupational safety and health and Atrial fibrillation.
Mary A. Whooley focuses on Internal medicine, Cardiology, Heart failure, Coronary artery disease and Myocardial infarction. Her Internal medicine research integrates issues from Endocrinology and Depression. Her studies in Depression integrate themes in fields like Cross-sectional study, Physical therapy, Risk factor and Comorbidity.
Her Physical therapy research is multidisciplinary, incorporating perspectives in Patient Health Questionnaire, Randomized controlled trial and Disease. Her study in the field of Coronary heart disease is also linked to topics like In patient. Her studies deal with areas such as Odds ratio, Body mass index, Cohort study and C-reactive protein as well as Prospective cohort study.
Mary A. Whooley spends much of her time researching Internal medicine, Rehabilitation, Veterans Affairs, Confidence interval and Family medicine. As part of her studies on Internal medicine, Mary A. Whooley often connects relevant subjects like Cardiology. When carried out as part of a general Cardiology research project, her work on Coronary artery disease and Cardiovascular outcomes is frequently linked to work in Soul, therefore connecting diverse disciplines of study.
The Rehabilitation study combines topics in areas such as Randomized controlled trial, Disease and Percutaneous coronary intervention. Mary A. Whooley focuses mostly in the field of Confidence interval, narrowing it down to topics relating to Emergency medicine and, in certain cases, Telehealth. The concepts of her Heart failure study are interwoven with issues in Increased risk and Myocardial infarction.
Her primary areas of investigation include Family medicine, Rehabilitation, Patient Health Questionnaire, Myocardial infarction and Meta-analysis. Mary A. Whooley works mostly in the field of Rehabilitation, limiting it down to topics relating to Veterans Affairs and, in certain cases, Propensity score matching, Comorbidity, Telemedicine and Hazard ratio, as a part of the same area of interest. Her Patient Health Questionnaire research includes elements of Prospective cohort study, White blood cell, Mental health, Physical therapy and Measurement invariance.
Her Myocardial infarction study combines topics from a wide range of disciplines, such as Stroke, Atrial fibrillation and Emergency medicine. Her Odds ratio study is associated with Internal medicine. She studies Biomarker which is a part of Internal medicine.
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Case-Finding Instruments for Depression: Two Questions Are as Good as Many
Mary A. Whooley;Andrew L. Avins;Andrew L. Avins;Andrew L. Avins;Jeanne Miranda;Warren S. Browner;Warren S. Browner;Warren S. Browner.
Journal of General Internal Medicine (1997)
Depressive symptoms and health-related quality of life: the Heart and Soul Study.
Bernice Ruo;John S. Rumsfeld;Mark A. Hlatky;Haiying Liu.
JAMA (2003)
Depressive Symptoms, Health Behaviors, and Risk of Cardiovascular Events in Patients With Coronary Heart Disease
Mary A. Whooley;Peter de Jonge;Eric Vittinghoff;Christian Otte.
JAMA (2008)
Adding Heparin to Aspirin Reduces the Incidence of Myocardial Infarction and Death in Patients With Unstable Angina: A Meta-analysis
Allison Oler;Mary A. Whooley;Jacqueline Oler;Deborah Grady.
JAMA (1996)
Depression and Medication Adherence in Outpatients With Coronary Heart Disease: Findings From the Heart and Soul Study
Anil Kishin Gehi;Donald Haas;Sharon Pipkin;Mary A. Whooley;Mary A. Whooley.
JAMA Internal Medicine (2005)
Managing depression in medical outpatients.
Mary A. Whooley;Gregory E. Simon.
The New England Journal of Medicine (2000)
Central Nervous System–Active Medications and Risk for Falls in Older Women
Kristine E. Ensrud;Terri L. Blackwell;Carol M. Mangione;Paula J. Bowman.
Journal of the American Geriatrics Society (2002)
Blood Pressure Reactivity to Psychological Stress Predicts Hypertension in the CARDIA Study
Karen A. Matthews;Charles R. Katholi;Heather McCreath;Mary A. Whooley.
Circulation (2004)
Depression screening and patient outcomes in cardiovascular care : a systematic review
Brett D. Thombs;Peter de Jonge;James C. Coyne;Mary A. Whooley.
JAMA (2008)
The Associations of Fibroblast Growth Factor 23 and Uncarboxylated Matrix Gla Protein With Mortality in Coronary Artery Disease: The Heart and Soul Study
Benjamin D. Parker;Leon J. Schurgers;Vincent M. Brandenburg;Robert H. Christenson.
Annals of Internal Medicine (2010)
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