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D. Leann Long

Researcher at University of Alabama at Birmingham

Publications -  77
Citations -  1017

D. Leann Long is an academic researcher from University of Alabama at Birmingham. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Population. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 56 publications receiving 627 citations. Previous affiliations of D. Leann Long include Samford University & West Virginia University.

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Midgestation Maternal Serum 25-Hydroxyvitamin D Level and Soluble Fms-Like Tyrosine Kinase 1/Placental Growth Factor Ratio as Predictors of Severe Preeclampsia

TL;DR: Combining midpregnancy serum 25(OH)D level with soluble fms-like tyrosine kinase 1/placental growth factor ratio provides a better prediction for the development of severe preeclampsia.
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An Investigation of Selection Bias in Estimating Racial Disparity in Stroke Risk Factors.

TL;DR: adjusted risk ratio estimates of racial disparities from complete-case analyses in both incident hypertension and incident left ventricular hypertrophy were virtually identical to estimates from inverse probability of attrition weighting and survivor average causal effect, and there was little evidence of selection bias in the estimation of racial differences for these incident risk factors.
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Effect of vaginal lubricants on natural fertility.

TL;DR: Lubricant use during procreative intercourse does not appear to reduce the probability of conceiving and women who used lubricants during the fertile window had similar fecundability to those women who did not use lubricants.
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Race, Social Status, and Depressive Symptoms: A Moderated Mediation Analysis of Chronic Low Back Pain Interference and Severity.

TL;DR: Higher perceived social status isassociated with less severe depressive symptoms, which in turn is associated with less pain severity and less pain interference for whites but not for blacks with cLBP.
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Black-White Differences in Cardiovascular Disease Mortality: A Prospective US Study, 2003-2017.

TL;DR: The higher Black:White CVD mortality risk is primarily explained by racial differences in socioeconomic status and CVD risk factors.