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Andrea Jaensch

Researcher at University of Ulm

Publications -  41
Citations -  2784

Andrea Jaensch is an academic researcher from University of Ulm. The author has contributed to research in topics: Environmental exposure & Cancer. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 37 publications receiving 1869 citations. Previous affiliations of Andrea Jaensch include Karolinska Institutet.

Papers
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Global estimates of mortality associated with long-term exposure to outdoor fine particulate matter

Richard T. Burnett, +54 more
TL;DR: PM2.5 exposure may be related to additional causes of death than the five considered by the GBD and that incorporation of risk information from other, nonoutdoor, particle sources leads to underestimation of disease burden, especially at higher concentrations.
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Particulate matter air pollution components and risk for lung cancer

TL;DR: This study indicates that the association between PM in air pollution and lung cancer can be attributed to various PM components and sources, and PM containing S and Ni might be particularly important.
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Natural-cause mortality and long-term exposure to particle components: an analysis of 19 European cohorts within the multi-center ESCAPE project.

Rob Beelen, +83 more
TL;DR: Long-term exposure to PM2.5 sulfur was associated with natural-cause mortality, and this association was robust to adjustment for other pollutants and PM 2.5 mass.
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Long-term exposure to elemental constituents of particulate matter and cardiovascular mortality in 19 European cohorts : Results from the ESCAPE and TRANSPHORM projects

Meng Wang, +73 more
TL;DR: In a joint analysis of 19 European cohorts, it is found that there is no statistically significant association between long-term exposure to 8 elemental constituents of particles and total cardiovascular mortality.
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Overweight/obesity and respiratory and allergic disease in children: international study of asthma and allergies in childhood (ISAAC) phase two.

TL;DR: It is confirmed that there is a strong relation of body mass index with wheeze especially in affluent countries, and bodymass index is associated with an objective marker of airways obstruction (FEV1/FVC) but no other objective markers of respiratory and allergic disorders.