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Angela Brand
Researcher at Maastricht University
Publications - 118
Citations - 1968
Angela Brand is an academic researcher from Maastricht University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Public health & Public health genomics. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 113 publications receiving 1649 citations. Previous affiliations of Angela Brand include Economic and Social Research Institute & United Nations University.
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The impact of genetics and genomics on public health
TL;DR: Public health practice has to date concerned itself with environmental or social determinants of health and disease and has paid scant attention to genomic variations within the population, but the advances brought about by genomics are changing these perceptions.
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Health Data Cooperatives – Citizen Empowerment
TL;DR: Empowering citizens by providing them with a platform to safely store, manage and share their health-related data will be a necessary element in the transformation towards a more effective and efficient precision medicine.
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The future of technologies for personalised medicine
Alison Harvey,Angela Brand,Stephen T. Holgate,Lars V. Kristiansen,Hans Lehrach,Aarno Palotie,Aarno Palotie,Barbara Prainsack +7 more
TL;DR: Key factors in the development of technologies for personalised medicine are standardisation, integration and harmonisation.
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An Index of Barriers for the Implementation of Personalised Medicine and Pharmacogenomics in Europe
Denis Horgan,Marleen Jansen,Lada Leyens,Jonathan A. Lal,Ralf Sudbrak,Erica Hackenitz,Ulrike Bußhoff,Wolfgang Ballensiefen,Angela Brand +8 more
TL;DR: In order to create an environment in which PM can thrive for the patients' best outcomes, there is an urgent need for systematic actions to remove as many barriers as possible.
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Genome-Based Health Literacy: A New Challenge for Public Health Genomics
TL;DR: Translating findings from epigenomics and systems biomedicine will help to understand that individual biological pathways or networks are permanently interacting with environmental networks such as social networks, and in the end also health literacy will become personalized.