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Alison Moody

Researcher at University College London

Publications -  19
Citations -  866

Alison Moody is an academic researcher from University College London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health Survey for England & Population. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 17 publications receiving 757 citations.

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Defining the online gambler and patterns of behaviour integration: evidence from the British Gambling Prevalence Survey 2010

TL;DR: The British Gambling Prevalence Survey (BGPS2010) as mentioned in this paper examined how people gamble and ways in which online and offline gambling are integrated, and found that the majority of online gamblers were also offline gamblers, and a broader taxonomy of gambling subgroups was evident.
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Scoring the ICECAP - a capability instrument : estimation of a UK general population tariff

TL;DR: The results of a best–worst scaling (BWS) study to value the Investigating Choice Experiments Capability Measure for Adults (ICECAP-A), a new capability measure among adults, in a UK setting showed greater value was placed on the difference between the lowest levels of capability than between the highest.
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An investigation of the construct validity of the ICECAP-A capability measure

TL;DR: This study suggests that the ICECAP-A measure can identify expected differences in capability wellbeing in a general population sample and could establish whether self-reported capabilities exhibit desirable validity and acceptability in sub-groups of the population such as patients, social care recipients and informal carers.

Obesity among children under 11

TL;DR: The data for 2001 and 2002 combined are used combined when analysing the relationships between social demographic factors and obesity in greater depth to support the development of an evidence-based approach to prevention, management and treatment of obesity in children.
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Social inequalities in prevalence of diagnosed and undiagnosed diabetes and impaired glucose regulation in participants in the Health Surveys for England series.

TL;DR: Social inequalities in hyperglycaemia exist, additional to well-known demographic and anthropometric risk factors for diabetes and IGR, as earlier diagnosis of diabetes and treatment of people with IGR can reduce adverse sequelae of diabetes.