H
Hiroyuki Doi
Researcher at Okayama University
Publications - 11
Citations - 368
Hiroyuki Doi is an academic researcher from Okayama University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Environmental exposure & Low birth weight. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 11 publications receiving 283 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Prenatal Exposure to Traffic-related Air Pollution and Child Behavioral Development Milestone Delays in Japan.
TL;DR: Air pollution exposure during gestation was positively associated with the risk of some developmental milestone delays at both ages, and air pollution was associated with verbal and fine motor development at age 2.5 years, and with behaviors related to inhibition and impulsivity at 5.
Journal ArticleDOI
Impact of maternal and paternal smoking on birth outcomes
Sachiko Inoue,Hiroo Naruse,Takashi Yorifuji,Tsuguhiko Kato,Takeshi Murakoshi,Hiroyuki Doi,S. V. Subramanian +6 more
TL;DR: Maternal smoking was significantly associated with birth weight and length, but paternal smoking was not, however, if both parents smoked, the risk of shorter birth length increased.
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Fine-particulate Air Pollution from Diesel Emission Control and Mortality Rates in Tokyo: A Quasi-experimental Study.
TL;DR: This quasi-experimental study in Tokyo suggests that emission control was associated with improvements in both air quality and health outcomes.
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Neurodevelopment in full-term small for gestational age infants: A nationwide Japanese population-based study
Akihito Takeuchi,Takashi Yorifuji,Kyohei Takahashi,Makoto Nakamura,Misao Kageyama,Toshihide Kubo,Tatsuya Ogino,Hiroyuki Doi +7 more
TL;DR: SGA is a risk factor for developmental delay, even in full-term infants, with non-negligible public health impacts.
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Acute exposure to fine and coarse particulate matter and infant mortality in Tokyo, Japan (2002-2013).
TL;DR: This study provides further evidence that acute exposure to PM2.5 and coarse particles (PM7- 2.5) is associated with an increased risk of infant mortality and rigorous evaluation of air quality guidelines for daily average PM2,5 and larger particles is needed.