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Dariusz Walkowiak

Researcher at Poznan University of Medical Sciences

Publications -  39
Citations -  463

Dariusz Walkowiak is an academic researcher from Poznan University of Medical Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Disease. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 26 publications receiving 114 citations.

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Mental Well-Being (Depression, Loneliness, Insomnia, Daily Life Fatigue) during COVID-19 Related Home-Confinement—A Study from Poland

TL;DR: Women had higher mean scores of depression, loneliness, and daily life fatigue and more often than males started exercising and there were more cases of increased alcohol consumption than among students.
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High-Fat, Western-Style Diet, Systemic Inflammation, and Gut Microbiota: A Narrative Review.

TL;DR: In this paper, a narrative review highlights the most important recent advances linking high-fat diet-driven dysbiosis and HFD-related inflammation, presents the pathomechanisms for these phenomena, and examines the possible causative relationship between pro-inflammatory status and gut microbiota changes.
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Medical students' knowledge and opinions about rare diseases: A case study from Poland.

TL;DR: As most future physicians do not possess knowledge about RD, there is an urgent need to raise the awareness on RD among medical students and educate them about such diseases.
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Predictors of COVID-19 Vaccination Campaign Success: Lessons Learnt from the Pandemic So Far. A Case Study from Poland.

TL;DR: In this article, a regression model was used to identify the underlying causes for vaccine hesitancy behaviors in 378 sub-regions of Poland and showed that such behaviours, even when going against the party agenda, can be indirectly measured through voting patterns.
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Medical Students' Voluntary Service During the COVID-19 Pandemic in Poland

TL;DR: In this article, the authors conducted a survey among 417 students of Poznan University of Medical Sciences to learn more about future healthcare professionals' volunteering during the COVID-19 pandemic and found that while the prime role of the volunteering was to relieve the healthcare system, it also reinforced such important medical values as altruism, public service and professional solidarity.