Maxine Weinstein
Maxine A. Weinstein is a Distinguished Professor of Population and Health at Georgetown University's Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. Provided by Wikipedia
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Daily exposure to stressors, daily perceived severity of stress, and mortality risk among US adults by Dana A. Glei, Maxine Weinstein
Published 2024-01-01
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Is the Pain killing you? Could Pain interference be a warning signal for midlife mortality? by Dana A. Glei, Maxine Weinstein
Published 2023-12-01
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Disadvantaged Americans are suffering the brunt of rising pain and physical limitations. by Dana A Glei, Maxine Weinstein
Published 2021-01-01
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In the midst of a pandemic, more introverted individuals may have a mortality advantage by Dana A. Glei, Maxine Weinstein
Published 2023-12-01
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Daily exposure to stressors, daily perceived severity of stress, and mortality risk among US adults. by Dana A Glei, Maxine Weinstein
Published 2024-01-01
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Smoking may compromise physical function long before it kills you by Dana A. Glei, Maxine Weinstein
Published 2023-11-01
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Socioeconomic disparities in U.S. mortality: The role of smoking and alcohol/drug abuse by Dana A. Glei, Chioun Lee, Maxine Weinstein
Published 2020-12-01
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What Matters Most for Predicting Survival? A Multinational Population-Based Cohort Study. by Noreen Goldman, Dana A Glei, Maxine Weinstein
Published 2016-01-01
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Cardiovascular variability, sociodemographics, and biomarkers of disease: the MIDUS study by Tara Gruenewald, Teresa E. Seeman, Tse-Hwei Choo, Jennifer Scodes, Clayton Snyder, Martina Pavlicova, Maxine Weinstein, Joseph E. Schwartz, Joseph E. Schwartz, Ramakrishna Mukkamala, Richard P. Sloan, Richard P. Sloan
Published 2023-08-01
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