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David Berendes

Researcher at Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Publications -  39
Citations -  939

David Berendes is an academic researcher from Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The author has contributed to research in topics: Sanitation & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 33 publications receiving 640 citations. Previous affiliations of David Berendes include National Institutes of Health & Georgia Institute of Technology.

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Hope in the context of lung cancer: relationships of hope to symptoms and psychological distress.

TL;DR: Examination of how hope, as conceptualized by Snyder et al., is associated with multiple indices of adjustment to lung cancer found that hope was inversely associated with major symptoms of cancer and psychological distress.
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Obesity Accelerates Mouse Mammary Tumor Growth in the Absence of Ovarian Hormones

TL;DR: Diet-induced obesity in a syngeneic mouse model of breast cancer enhanced tumor growth, specifically in the absence of ovarian hormones, which support epidemiological evidence that obesity is associated with increased breast cancer incidence and mortality in postmenopausal but not premenopausal women.
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Estimation of global recoverable human and animal faecal biomass

TL;DR: This study presents the first global-scale accounting of recoverable faeces (livestock animal and human) from 2003 to 2030 using country-specific human and animal population estimates and estimated species-specific faece production by human or animal body mass.
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Safely Managed Sanitation for All Means Fecal Sludge Management for At Least 1.8 Billion People in Low and Middle Income Countries.

TL;DR: FSM strategies must be included in future sanitation investment to achieve safe management of fecal wastes and protect public health, and in the poorest quintile, households' sanitation facilities were almost 170 times more likely to require FSM than in the richest quintile.
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Risk factors for childhood enteric infection in urban Maputo, Mozambique: A cross-sectional study.

TL;DR: A high prevalence of enteric infections is found, primarily among children without diarrhea, and weak associations between bacterial and protozoan infections and environmental risk factors including WASH are found.