D
David W. Johnson
Researcher at University of Queensland
Publications - 2880
Citations - 157072
David W. Johnson is an academic researcher from University of Queensland. The author has contributed to research in topics: Peritoneal dialysis & Kidney disease. The author has an hindex of 160, co-authored 2714 publications receiving 140778 citations. Previous affiliations of David W. Johnson include Minnesota Department of Transportation & Open University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Effects of Conflict Resolution Training Integrated into a Kindergarten Curriculum
TL;DR: Significant differences between trained and untrained children occurred in their knowledge and retention of the conflict resolution procedure, willingness and ability to use the procedure in conflict situations, and conceptual understanding of friendship.
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Center Effects and Peritoneal Dialysis Peritonitis Outcomes: Analysis of a National Registry.
Htay Htay,Yeoungjee Cho,Elaine M. Pascoe,Darsy Darssan,Annie Claire Nadeau-Fredette,Carmel M. Hawley,Philip A. Clayton,Monique Borlace,Sunil V. Badve,Kamal Sud,Neil Boudville,Stephen P. McDonald,Stephen P. McDonald,David W. Johnson +13 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that center effects contribute substantially to the appreciable variation in PD peritonitis outcomes that exist across PD centers within Australia.
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Clonal evolution in myeloma: the impact of maintenance lenalidomide and depth of response on the genetics and sub-clonal structure of relapsed disease in uniformly treated newly diagnosed patients
John R Jones,Niels Weinhold,Cody Ashby,Brian A Walker,Christopher P. Wardell,Charlotte Pawlyn,Leo Rasche,Lorenzo Melchor,David A Cairns,Walter M Gregory,David W. Johnson,Dil B Begum,Sidra Ellis,Amy L. Sherborne,Gordon Cook,Martin Kaiser,Mark T. Drayson,Roger G. Owen,Graham Jackson,Faith E. Davies,Mel Greaves,Gareth J. Morgan +21 more
TL;DR: This study shows that the depth of response is a key determinant of the evolutionary patterns seen at relapse, and in patients achieving a partial response, the evolutionary features were predominantly stable with a similar mutational and structural profile seen at both time points.
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Dietary protein restriction as a treatment for slowing chronic kidney disease progression: the case against.
TL;DR: Patients with progressive kidney disease are likely to be better served by avoiding dietary protein restriction and instituting alternative, proven renoprotective measures (e.g. renin‐angiotensin system blockade, blood pressure reduction and statin therapy).
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Early and late patient outcomes in urgent-start peritoneal dialysis
TL;DR: Urgent-start PD appears to be a safe way to initiate urgent renal replacement therapy in patients without established dialysis access and has acceptably low early complication rates and similar long-term technique survival.