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Hua Lu

Researcher at Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Publications -  50
Citations -  3114

Hua Lu is an academic researcher from Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The author has contributed to research in topics: Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System & Population. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 42 publications receiving 2138 citations.

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Clustering of Five Health-Related Behaviors for Chronic Disease Prevention Among Adults, United States, 2013.

TL;DR: Assessment of the clustering of five key health-related behaviors for chronic disease prevention among adults aged 21 years or older in each state and the District of Columbia found collaborative efforts can promote all 5 behaviors and produce population-wide changes.
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Geographic Accessibility of Pulmonologists for Adults With COPD: United States, 2013.

TL;DR: County-level geographic variations in pulmonologist access for adults with COPD suggest that those adults with limited access will have to depend on care from primary care physicians.
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State-Specific Patterns of Cigarette Smoking, Smokeless Tobacco Use, and E-Cigarette Use Among Adults - United States, 2016.

TL;DR: Prevalence of adult cigarette smoking, smokeless tobacco use, and e-cigarette use varies across states, highlighting the importance of comprehensive statewide tobacco control and use prevention efforts that address the diverse tobacco products used among adults.
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PLACES: Local Data for Better Health

TL;DR: PLACES allows local health departments and others to better understand the burden and geographic distribution of chronic disease–related outcomes in their areas regardless of population size and urban–rural status and assists them in planning public health interventions.
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Neighborhood commuting environment and obesity in the United States: an urban-rural stratified multilevel analysis

TL;DR: The link between commuting environment and obesity differed across the regional urbanization levels, and urban and regional planning policies may improve current commuting environments and better support healthy behaviors and healthy community development.