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Christopher J L Murray
Researcher at Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation
Publications - 833
Citations - 393064
Christopher J L Murray is an academic researcher from Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Mortality rate. The author has an hindex of 209, co-authored 754 publications receiving 310329 citations. Previous affiliations of Christopher J L Murray include Harvard University & University of Washington.
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Journal ArticleDOI
The global burden of disease study 2013: What does it mean for the NTDs?
Jennifer R. Herricks,Jennifer R. Herricks,Peter J. Hotez,Valentine Wanga,Luc E. Coffeng,Luc E. Coffeng,Juanita A. Haagsma,Juanita A. Haagsma,María-Gloria Basáñez,Geoffrey Buckle,Christine M. Budke,Hélène Carabin,Eric M. Fèvre,Eric M. Fèvre,Thomas Fürst,Thomas Fürst,Thomas Fürst,Yara A. Halasa,Charles H. King,Michele E. Murdoch,Kapa D. Ramaiah,Donald S. Shepard,Wilma A. Stolk,Eduardo A. Undurraga,Jeffrey D. Stanaway,Mohsen Naghavi,Christopher J L Murray +26 more
TL;DR: Country-specific estimates of the prevalence or incidence of neglected tropical diseases, including cholera, typhoid and scabies are identified, including scabies.
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Guidelines for Accurate and Transparent Health Estimates Reporting: the GATHER statement
Gretchen A Stevens,Leontine Alkema,Robert E. Black,J. Ties Boerma,Gary S. Collins,Majid Ezzati,John Grove,Daniel R Hogan,Margaret C. Hogan,Richard Horton,Joy E Lawn,Ana Marušić,Colin Mathers,Christopher J L Murray,Igor Rudan,Joshua A. Salomon,Paul J. Simpson,Theo Vos,Vivian Welch +18 more
TL;DR: Gretchen Stevens and colleagues present the GATHER statement, which seeks to promote good practice in the reporting of global health estimates.
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The Epidemiologic Transition Revisited: Compositional Models for Causes of Death by Age and Sex
TL;DR: The results confirm that declines in overall mortality are accompanied by systematic changes in the composition of causes in many age groups, and the underlying patterns that emerge offer insights into the epidemiologic transition from high-m mortality to low-mortality settings.
Comparative analyses of more than 50 household surveys on health status
TL;DR: Despite efforts to improve the comparability of existing household interview data on non-fatal health, the paper concludes that the valid comparison of existing data from household interview surveys across countries is limited.
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The global burden of hemorrhagic stroke: a summary of findings from the GBD 2010 study
Rita Krishnamurthi,Andrew E. Moran,Mohammad H. Forouzanfar,Derrick A Bennett,George A. Mensah,Carlene M.M. Lawes,Suzanne Barker-Collo,Myles Connor,Gregory A. Roth,Ralph L. Sacco,Majid Ezzati,Mohsen Naghavi,Christopher J L Murray,Valery L. Feigin +13 more
TL;DR: Rates for HS incidence, mortality, and DALY lost, as well as MIR decreased in the past 2 decades in HIC, but increased significantly in LMIC countries, particularly in those patients ≤75 years, which suggest that reducing the burden of HS is a priority particularly inLMIC.