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Andrew J. Martin
Researcher at University of New South Wales
Publications - 897
Citations - 43053
Andrew J. Martin is an academic researcher from University of New South Wales. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Academic achievement. The author has an hindex of 84, co-authored 819 publications receiving 36203 citations. Previous affiliations of Andrew J. Martin include University of Western Australia & Max Planck Society.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Effects of CO 2 concentration on a late summer surface sea ice community
Andrew McMinn,Marius N. Müller,Marius N. Müller,Andrew J. Martin,Sarah C. Ugalde,Shihong Lee,Katerina Castrisios,Ken G. Ryan +7 more
TL;DR: The results suggest that the summer sea ice brine communities were not limited by in situ CO2 concentrations and were not adversely affected by pH values down to 7.1.
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The study design and methodology for the ARCHER study - adolescent rural cohort study of hormones, health, education, environments and relationships
Katharine Steinbeck,Philip Hazell,Robert G. Cumming,S. Rachel Skinner,Rebecca Ivers,Robert Booy,Greg Fulcher,David J. Handelsman,Andrew J. Martin,G Morgan,Jean Starling,Adrian Bauman,Margot Rawsthorne,David Bennett,Chin Moi Chow,Mary K. Lam,Patrick J. Kelly,Ngiare Brown,Karen Paxton,Catherine Hawke +19 more
TL;DR: The strengths of this study include enrollment starting in the earliest stages of puberty, the use of frequent urine samples in addition to annual blood samples to measure puberty hormones, and the simultaneous use of parental questionnaires.
Journal ArticleDOI
Dedicated paediatric Outpatient Parenteral Antimicrobial Therapy medical support: a pre-post observational study.
Ariel O Mace,Charlie McLeod,Daniel K Yeoh,Julie Vine,Yu Ping Chen,Andrew J. Martin,Andrew J. Martin,Christopher C Blyth,Asha C. Bowen +8 more
TL;DR: The introduction of a formal medical team to HiTH demonstrated a positive clinical impact on OPAT patients’ outcomes, and these findings support the ongoing utility of medical governance in a nurse-led HiTH service.
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Near fatal asthma attacks: the reliability of descriptive information collected from close acquaintances.
D. A. Campbell,G. McLennan,J. R. Coates,Peter Frith,P. A. Gluyas,K. M. Latimer,Andrew J. Martin,David Roder,Richard E. Ruffin,D Scarce +9 more
TL;DR: The more visible the asthma manifestation, and the more recent the period to which it applies, the more reliable is the information provided by close acquaintances, according to a South Australian asthma mortality study.
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Predicting patients' utilities from quality of life items: an improved scoring system for the UBQ-H.
TL;DR: Two new scoring methods were devised by regressing the UBQ-H data against patients' self-assessed utilities and produced significantly lower estimates and more accurately reflected patients'self-assessment utilities.