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Ikenna C. Eze
Researcher at Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute
Publications - 52
Citations - 2292
Ikenna C. Eze is an academic researcher from Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Noise & Population. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 45 publications receiving 1653 citations. Previous affiliations of Ikenna C. Eze include University of Basel.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Association between Ambient Air Pollution and Diabetes Mellitus in Europe and North America: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
Ikenna C. Eze,Lars G. Hemkens,Heiner C. Bucher,Barbara Hoffmann,Christian Schindler,Nino Künzli,Tamara Schikowski,Nicole Probst-Hensch +7 more
TL;DR: Existing evidence indicates a positive association of air pollution and T2DM risk, albeit there is high risk of bias.
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Insufficient Fruit and Vegetable Intake in a Low- and Middle-Income Setting: A Population-Based Survey in Semi-Urban Tanzania
Beverly Msambichaka,Ikenna C. Eze,Ramadhani Abdul,Salim Abdulla,Paul R. Klatser,Marcel Tanner,Ramaiya Kaushik,Eveline Geubbels,Nicole Probst-Hensch +8 more
TL;DR: Public health interventions should target the socio-economically deprived and culturally-rooted preferences while prioritizing promotion of vegetable for most immediate gain in overall FV intake.
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Long-term air pollution exposure and diabetes in a population-based Swiss cohort.
Ikenna C. Eze,Emmanuel Schaffner,Evelyn Fischer,Tamara Schikowski,Martin Adam,Medea Imboden,Ming Tsai,David Carballo,Arnold von Eckardstein,Nino Künzli,Christian Schindler,Nicole Probst-Hensch +11 more
TL;DR: PM10 appears to be a useful marker of aspects of air pollution relevant for diabetes, observed at concentrations below air quality guidelines, even in the two-pollutant model.
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Transportation noise exposure and cardiovascular mortality: a nationwide cohort study from Switzerland
Harris Héritier,Harris Héritier,Danielle Vienneau,Danielle Vienneau,Maria Foraster,Maria Foraster,Ikenna C. Eze,Ikenna C. Eze,Emmanuel Schaffner,Emmanuel Schaffner,Laurie Thiesse,Franziska Rudzik,Manuel Habermacher,Micha Köpfli,Reto Pieren,Mark Brink,Christian Cajochen,Jean Marc Wunderli,Nicole Probst-Hensch,Nicole Probst-Hensch,Martin Röösli,Martin Röösli +21 more
TL;DR: The impact of all major transportation noise sources on cardiovascular diseases is demonstrated, including mid-range IR levels at night, which are potentially more harmful than continuous noise levels of the same average level.
Journal ArticleDOI
Long-term exposure to transportation noise and air pollution in relation to incident diabetes in the SAPALDIA study
Ikenna C. Eze,Ikenna C. Eze,Maria Foraster,Maria Foraster,Emmanuel Schaffner,Emmanuel Schaffner,Danielle Vienneau,Danielle Vienneau,Harris Héritier,Harris Héritier,Franziska Rudzik,Laurie Thiesse,Reto Pieren,Medea Imboden,Medea Imboden,Arnold von Eckardstein,Christian Schindler,Christian Schindler,Mark Brink,Christian Cajochen,Jean Marc Wunderli,Martin Röösli,Martin Röösli,Nicole Probst-Hensch,Nicole Probst-Hensch +24 more
TL;DR: Transportation noise may be more relevant than AP in the development of diabetes, potentially acting through noise-induced sleep disturbances, as observed among participants reporting poor sleep quality or sleeping with open windows.