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Bing Lu
Researcher at Brigham and Women's Hospital
Publications - 191
Citations - 7658
Bing Lu is an academic researcher from Brigham and Women's Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Osteoarthritis & Prospective cohort study. The author has an hindex of 43, co-authored 176 publications receiving 6146 citations. Previous affiliations of Bing Lu include Veterans Health Administration & University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Papers
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Obesity and inequities in health in the developing world.
TL;DR: Obesity among adult women is already a relevant booster of health inequities and, in the absence of concerted national public actions to prevent obesity, economic growth will greatly expand the list of developing countries where this situation occurs.
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A new stage of the nutrition transition in China
TL;DR: The long-term trend is a shift towards a high-fat, high-energy-density and low-fibre diet, linked with rapid increases of overweight, obesity and diet-related non-communicable diseases (DRNCDs) as well as total mortality for urban residents.
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Relationship of Sedentary Behavior and Physical Activity to Incident Cardiovascular Disease: Results From the Women's Health Initiative
Andrea K. Chomistek,JoAnn E. Manson,Marcia L. Stefanick,Bing Lu,Megan Sands-Lincoln,Scott B. Going,Lorena Garcia,Matthew A. Allison,Stacy T. Sims,Michael J. LaMonte,Karen C. Johnson,Charles B. Eaton +11 more
TL;DR: Prolonged sitting time was associated with increased CVD risk, independent of leisure-time physical activity, in postmenopausal women without a history of CVD.
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Trends in the incidence, demographics, and outcomes of end‐stage renal disease due to lupus nephritis in the US from 1995 to 2006
Karen H. Costenbader,Amrita Desai,Graciela S. Alarcón,Linda T. Hiraki,Tamara Shaykevich,M. Alan Brookhart,Elena Massarotti,Bing Lu,Daniel H. Solomon,Wolfgang C. Winkelmayer +9 more
TL;DR: While SIRs for lupus nephritis ESRD among those who were ages 5-39 years, African American, or lived in the southeastern US increased significantly from 1995 to 2006, outcomes did not improve in over a decade of evaluation.
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Understanding the nutrition transition: measuring rapid dietary changes in transitional countries.
TL;DR: Reliance on recipes standardised for animal food and edible oil contents will lead to very large systematic errors in the measurement of energy, fat and protein intakes in transitional societies.