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Andrew Rundle

Researcher at Columbia University

Publications -  320
Citations -  15536

Andrew Rundle is an academic researcher from Columbia University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Population. The author has an hindex of 62, co-authored 281 publications receiving 13215 citations. Previous affiliations of Andrew Rundle include State University of New York at New Paltz & Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai.

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Short Sleep Duration as a Risk Factor for Hypertension Analyses of the First National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey

TL;DR: Sleep durations of ≤5 hours per night were associated with a significantly increased risk of hypertension in subjects between the ages of 32 and 59 years, and controlling for the potential confounding variables only partially attenuated this relationship.
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COVID-19-Related School Closings and Risk of Weight Gain Among Children.

TL;DR: The COVID-19 pandemic will likely double out-of-school time this year for many children in the U.S. and will exacerbate the risk factors for weight gain associated with summer recess and may exacerbate the epidemic of childhood obesity and increase disparities in obesity risk.
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Sleep Duration as a Risk Factor for Diabetes Incidence in a Large US Sample

TL;DR: Short sleep duration could be a significant risk factor for diabetes and the association between long sleep duration and diabetes incidence is more likely to be due to some unmeasured confounder such as poor sleep quality.
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Using Google Street View to audit neighborhood environments.

TL;DR: This exploratory study indicates that Google Street View can be used to audit neighborhood environments and finds relatively high levels of concordance, whereas measures of physical disorder had low levels.
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Neighborhood Food Environment and Walkability Predict Obesity in New York City

TL;DR: Access to BMI-healthy food stores is associated with lower BMI and lower prevalence of obesity and increasing density of food outlets categorized as BMI-unhealthy was not significantly associated with BMI or obesity.