Centre for Population and Health Sciences
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The Centre for Population Health Sciences (CPHS) draws on a long history of public health and general practice at the University of Edinburgh. The Centre brings together researchers with expertise in epidemiology, statistics and modelling, sociology, social policy, psychology, economics, geography, health promotion, nursing and medicine. Thus CPHS research projects can take advantage of a multi-disciplinary approach when needed, which is often the case in population health research.
Items in this Collection
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Supplementary File 1: Key findings from downloaded COVID-19 information for those categorised as high-risk (20 April 2020)
Data supporting McClatchey et al "COVID-19 information for people living with asthma: A rapid review of publicly available information" JACI: In practice https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaip.2021.01.003 . Abstract: In 2020, ... -
Ergonomic assessment of the Dix-Hallpike’s test
Abstract Objectives: Numerous tasks carried out in the otolaryngology clinic increase the chances of developing injury among practitioners. To mitigate this, we aim to observe the risk of musculoskeletal injury in ... -
SUPERSEDED - Supplementary File 1: Key findings from downloaded COVID-19 information for those categorised as high-risk (20 April 2020)
## SUPERSEDED - this item has been replaced by the one which can be found at https://doi.org/10.7488/ds/2982 . ## Data supporting McClatchey et al "COVID-19 information for people living with asthma: A rapid review of ... -
Dissertation 2020 R Code
R code in support of University of Edinburgh Masters thesis "Racial Differences in the Predictive Ability of Apgar Scores: A Quantitative Analysis". The source data for the anlaysis was the National Vital Statistics Cohort ... -
Stress hyperglycaemia in hospitalised patients and their 3-year risk of diabetes: A Scottish Retrospective cohort study
(University of Edinburgh. Centre for Population Health Sciences, 2014-08-11)Background: Hyperglycaemia during hospital admission is common in patients who are not known to have diabetes and is associated with adverse outcomes. The risk of subsequently developing type 2 diabetes, however, is not ...