B
Bruce Neal
Researcher at The George Institute for Global Health
Publications - 620
Citations - 109123
Bruce Neal is an academic researcher from The George Institute for Global Health. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Blood pressure. The author has an hindex of 108, co-authored 561 publications receiving 87213 citations. Previous affiliations of Bruce Neal include National Institutes of Health & University of the Western Cape.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Mean population salt consumption in India: a systematic review.
Claire Johnson,Devarsetty Praveen,Alun Pope,Thout Sudhir Raj,Rakesh N Pillai,Mary Anne Land,Bruce Neal +6 more
TL;DR: The available data leave some uncertainty about exact mean salt consumption in India but there is little doubt that population salt consumption far exceeds the WHO-recommended maximum of 5 g per person per day.
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The burden of fatal and non-fatal injury in rural India
Magnolia Cardona,Rohina Joshi,Rebecca Ivers,Satish Iyengar,Clara K Chow,Samuel A. Colman,G. Ramakrishna,Rakhi Dandona,Mark Stevenson,Bruce Neal +9 more
TL;DR: Injury is an important contributor to disease burden in rural India and it is important that effective interventions are developed and implemented to minimize the impact of injury in this region.
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Nutrient profile of 23 596 packaged supermarket foods and non-alcoholic beverages in Australia and New Zealand
TL;DR: Improvements in nutritional quality of foods through product reformulation have significant potential to improve population diets and the few healthy choices available in key staple food categories is a concern.
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Earlier blood pressure-lowering and greater attenuation of hematoma growth in acute intracerebral hemorrhage: INTERACT pilot phase
Hisatomi Arima,Yining Huang,Ji-Guang Wang,Emma Heeley,Candice Delcourt,Mark W Parsons,Qiang Li,Bruce Neal,John Chalmers,Craig S. Anderson +9 more
TL;DR: Earlier initiation of intensive blood pressure-lowering treatment is likely to provide greater protection against hematoma growth in acute intracerebral hemorrhage.
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Effects of sodium-glucose co-transporter-2 inhibitors in type 2 diabetes in women versus men
Karin Rådholm,Karin Rådholm,Zien Zhou,Zien Zhou,Kristin K. Clemens,Kristin K. Clemens,Bruce Neal,Bruce Neal,Bruce Neal,Mark Woodward,Mark Woodward +10 more
TL;DR: SGLT2 inhibition provided similar protection against vascular risks and death, and similar risks of serious adverse events, for women and men, as well as safety outcomes stratified by sex.