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Debbie A Lawlor
Researcher at University of Bristol
Publications - 1118
Citations - 118183
Debbie A Lawlor is an academic researcher from University of Bristol. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Body mass index. The author has an hindex of 147, co-authored 1114 publications receiving 101123 citations. Previous affiliations of Debbie A Lawlor include Southampton General Hospital & University of Vermont.
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Physical activity during pregnancy and language development in the offspring.
Anne Marie Z. Jukic,Debbie A Lawlor,Mette Juhl,Katrine Mari Owe,Barbara A. Lewis,Jihong Liu,Allen J. Wilcox,Matthew P. Longnecker +7 more
TL;DR: The most robust finding was a transient increase in offspring vocabulary score at young ages with maternal leisure activity, which is linked with lower verbal IQ in the offspring.
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Association between childhood and adulthood socioeconomic position and pregnancy induced hypertension: results from the Aberdeen children of the 1950s cohort study
TL;DR: Although imprecise these results suggest that neither childhood nor adulthood socioeconomic adversity is associated with pregnancy induced hypertension.
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Obesity and use of acute hospital services in participants of the Renfrew/Paisley study
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors found that overweight and obesity are associated with comorbidities, increasing levels of overweight and obese may impact on hospital use, and that participants who were obese in midlife had more than expected acute hospital admissions and in particular more bed days.
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Using latent class analysis to develop a model of the relationship between socioeconomic position and ethnicity: cross-sectional analyses from a multi-ethnic birth cohort study
Lesley Fairley,Báltica Cabieses,Neil Small,Emily S. Petherick,Debbie A Lawlor,Kate E. Pickett,John Wright +6 more
TL;DR: LCA allows different aspects of an individual’s SEP to be considered in one multidimensional indicator, which can then be integrated in epidemiological analyses, and suggest a careful use of SEP measures in health research, especially when looking at different ethnic groups.
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Temperature at birth, coronary heart disease, and insulin resistance: cross sectional analyses of the British women's heart and health study
TL;DR: Cold outdoor temperature at birth is associated with increased coronary heart disease, insulin resistance, dyslipidaemia, and poor lung function, and further research is needed to determine whether this finding reflects events occurring late in the third trimester of intrauterine growth or early in the postnatal period.