C
Cyrus Cooper
Researcher at Southampton General Hospital
Publications - 1961
Citations - 248928
Cyrus Cooper is an academic researcher from Southampton General Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Osteoporosis. The author has an hindex of 204, co-authored 1869 publications receiving 206782 citations. Previous affiliations of Cyrus Cooper include University of Oxford & University of York.
Papers
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Using Natural Experiments to Evaluate Population Health Interventions: Guidance for Producers and Users of Evidence
Peter Craig,Cyrus Cooper,David Gunnell,Sally Haw,Kenny D Lawson,Sally Macintrye,David Ogilvie,Mark Petticrew,Barney Reeves,Matt Sutton,Simon G. Thompson +10 more
TL;DR: The aim of this guidance is to help producers, users, funders and publishers of evidence understand how and when 'natural experiments' can be used to good effect.
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Birth weight, infant weight gain, and cause-specific mortality: the Hertfordshire Cohort Study
Holly E. Syddall,Avan Aihie Sayer,S. J. Simmonds,Clive Osmond,V. Cox,Elaine M. Dennison,David J.P. Barker,Cyrus Cooper +7 more
TL;DR: A one-standard-deviation increase in birth weight reduced all-cause mortality risk by age 75 years by 0.86% for both men and women.
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State of the art in osteoporosis risk assessment and treatment.
Justin Liu,Elizabeth M Curtis,Cyrus Cooper,Cyrus Cooper,Cyrus Cooper,Nicholas C. Harvey,Nicholas C. Harvey +6 more
TL;DR: Urgent work is needed at the level of health care systems, national and international policy, and in communication with patients and public, to ensure that all patients who should receive treatment for osteoporosis actually do so.
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Physical activity intensity, sedentary time, and body composition in preschoolers
Paul J. Collings,Soren Brage,Charlotte L. Ridgway,Nicholas C. Harvey,Keith M. Godfrey,Hazel Inskip,Cyrus Cooper,Nicholas J. Wareham,Ulf Ekelund +8 more
TL;DR: The results indicate that efforts to challenge pediatric obesity may benefit from prioritizing VPA, the only intensity of PA to exhibit strong inverse associations with both total adiposity and abdominal adiposity.
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Use of keyboards and symptoms in the neck and arm: evidence from a national survey.
TL;DR: It is concluded that use of keyboards was associated with discomfort at the shoulder and wrist or hand, but risk estimates were lower than generally reported in workplace surveys.