A
Adam Coutts
Researcher at University of Cambridge
Publications - 46
Citations - 3668
Adam Coutts is an academic researcher from University of Cambridge. The author has contributed to research in topics: Public health & Refugee. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 43 publications receiving 3223 citations. Previous affiliations of Adam Coutts include University of London & University College London.
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The public health effect of economic crises and alternative policy responses in Europe: an empirical analysis
David Stuckler,David Stuckler,Sanjay Basu,Sanjay Basu,Marc Suhrcke,Adam Coutts,Michael McKee,Michael McKee +7 more
TL;DR: Rises in unemployment are associated with significant short-term increases in premature deaths from intentional violence, while reducing traffic fatalities, and active labour market programmes that keep and reintegrate workers in jobs could mitigate some adverse health effects of economic downturns.
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Commentary: Reconciling the three accounts of social capital
TL;DR: This chapter discusses class, stratification and inequalities in health: A comparison of the Registrar-General’s Social Classes and the Cambridge Scale.
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Effects of the 2008 recession on health: a first look at European data
David Stuckler,David Stuckler,Sanjay Basu,Sanjay Basu,Marc Suhrcke,Adam Coutts,Martin McKee,Martin McKee +7 more
TL;DR: Overall, consistent with earlier predictions, there is no evidence of a major deviation from past trends in all-cause mortality rates, since the short-term mortality fl uctuations were mainly driven by suicides and road-traffi c fatalities.
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Health workers and the weaponisation of health care in Syria: a preliminary inquiry for The Lancet–American University of Beirut Commission on Syria
Fouad M. Fouad,Annie Sparrow,Ahmad Tarakji,Mohamad Alameddine,Fadi El-Jardali,Adam Coutts,Nour El Arnaout,Lama Bou Karroum,Mohammed Jawad,Mohammed Jawad,Sophie Roborgh,Aula Abbara,Fadi Alhalabi,Ibrahim AlMasri,Samer Jabbour +14 more
TL;DR: The tremendous pressures that health workers have been under and continue to endure, and the remarkable resilience and resourcefulness they have displayed in response to this crisis are described.
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Alcohol use during the great recession of 2008-2009.
TL;DR: There was an increase in abstention from alcohol and a rise in frequent binging during the Great Recession, and non-Black, unmarried men under 30 years, who recently became unemployed, were at highest risk for frequent binged.