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John Attia

Researcher at University of Newcastle

Publications -  796
Citations -  39731

John Attia is an academic researcher from University of Newcastle. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 91, co-authored 727 publications receiving 32950 citations. Previous affiliations of John Attia include John Hunter Hospital & McMaster University.

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Interns are from Venus, consultants are from Mars: differential perception among clinicians.

TL;DR: To test for the presence of sex‐based differences in perception (the notion that men and women “think” differently, and that differences in Perception are biologically based) among healthcare professionals, a large number of healthcare professionals are surveyed.
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Histopathologic findings of autoimmunity in thyroid, pituitary, and adrenal diseases in chronic hepatitis C postmortem cases.

TL;DR: Thyroid disease was the only major endocrinopathy associated with hepatitis C infection, with a prevalence comparable with other serologic and nonhistologic antemortem findings, and there was no evidence of pituitary or adrenal involvement.
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Cross-cancer genome-wide association study of endometrial cancer and epithelial ovarian cancer identifies genetic risk regions associated with risk of both cancers

Dylan M. Glubb, +175 more
- 02 May 2020 - 
TL;DR: The shared genetic etiology between endometrial cancer and epithelial ovarian cancer was explored using GWAS summary statistics and seven loci associated with risk for both cancers were found.
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Introducing an accessible series on statistics for clinicians.

TL;DR: As health care providers, the authors are increasingly being asked to engage in critical appraisal and sort through the large volume of research to help guide decision making, and this means reading mainly the abstract and the discussion, and glossing over the jargon in the methods and results.
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Balancing access and quality in comprehensive stroke care

TL;DR: The establishment of stroke units and stroke centers has transformed the inpatient care of cerebrovascular disease and resulted in improved outcomes for patients hospitalized with stroke and patients hospitalized at primary stroke centers have lower mortality and are more likely to receive thrombolytic therapy.