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James White

Researcher at Cardiff University

Publications -  83
Citations -  1997

James White is an academic researcher from Cardiff University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Psychological intervention & Mental health. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 75 publications receiving 1540 citations. Previous affiliations of James White include University College London & University of Bristol.

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Cognitive ability in early adulthood as a predictor of habitual drug use during later military service and civilian life: The Vietnam Experience Study

TL;DR: Interventions to prevent drug use could attempt to improve early life IQ and opportunities for employment, and socioeconomic position might lie on the pathway linking earlier IQ and later habitual drug use but might also act as a surrogate for IQ.
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The Communities First (ComFi) study: protocol for a prospective controlled quasi-experimental study to evaluate the impact of area-wide regeneration on mental health and social cohesion in deprived communities

TL;DR: This study will evaluate the impact of Communities First on residents’ mental health and social cohesion and carry out a cost-consequences analysis to summarise the outcomes generated as well as service utilisation and utility gains.
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Equity in healthcare for coronary heart disease, Wales (UK) 2004-2010: A population-based electronic cohort study

TL;DR: Primary care components of CHD healthcare were equitably delivered and evidence of inequity was found for revascularization procedures, although this inequity is likely to have only a modest effect on social gradients in CHD mortality.
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Acceptability, internal consistency and test–retest reliability of scales to assess parental and nursery staff’s self-efficacy, motivation and knowledge in relation to pre-school children’s nutrition, oral health and physical activity

TL;DR: The findings demonstrate that the items and scales show good acceptability, internal consistency and test–retest reliability of self-efficacy, motivation and knowledge scales relating to pre-school children's nutrition, oral health and physical activity.
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Improving mental health through neighbourhood regeneration: the role of cohesion, belonging, quality and disorder.

TL;DR: Targeted regeneration that increases neighbourhood quality and reduced neighbourhood disorder could mitigate the mental health inequalities associated with socioeconomic deprivation.