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Angela Wade

Researcher at UCL Institute of Child Health

Publications -  67
Citations -  5189

Angela Wade is an academic researcher from UCL Institute of Child Health. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Spirometry. The author has an hindex of 28, co-authored 67 publications receiving 4802 citations. Previous affiliations of Angela Wade include Great Ormond Street Hospital & Boston Children's Hospital.

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Support for healthy breastfeeding mothers with healthy term babies

TL;DR: All forms of extra support analyzed together showed a decrease in cessation of 'any breastfeeding', which includes partial and exclusive breastfeeding, and substantial heterogeneity for within-group heterogeneity remained high for all of these analyses, so advise caution when making specific conclusions based on subgroup results.
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Support for breastfeeding mothers

TL;DR: Effective support offered by professionals and lay people together was specific to breastfeeding and was offered to women who had decided to breastfeed, but its effects on exclusive breastfeeding were less clear.
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Incidence, cause, and short-term outcome of convulsive status epilepticus in childhood: prospective population-based study

TL;DR: Convulsive status epilepticus in childhood is more common, has a different range of causes, and a lower risk of death than that in adults, and these paediatric data will help inform management of convulsive status epilepsy and appropriate allocation of resources to reduce the effects of this disorder in childhood.
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Cerebral venous sinus thrombosis in children: risk factors, presentation, diagnosis and outcome

TL;DR: Clinical presentations of CSVT, prothrombotic risk factors and other predisposing events, clinical and radiological features of brain lesions in CSVT compared with arterial stroke, and predictors of outcome were examined.
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Investigation of risk factors in children with arterial ischemic stroke.

TL;DR: There was a significant association between cerebral arterial abnormalities and systolic blood pressure greater than 90th percentile and a trend for an association with varicella within the previous year.