J
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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Journal ArticleDOI
Direct Oral Anticoagulants and Timing of Hip Fracture Surgery
Seth M. Tarrant,Michael J. Catanach,Mahsa Sarrami,Matthew Clapham,John Attia,Zsolt J. Balogh,Zsolt J. Balogh +6 more
TL;DR: Timing of surgery does not influence common surgical outcomes such as 30-day mortality, SAE, transfusion, and POD1 Hb in patients taking DOACs on admission in patients aged 65 and over between 2011 and 2018.
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Urban–rural influences on suicidality: Gaps in the existing literature and recommendations for future research
TL;DR: A review of the literature was undertaken, using a snowballing and saturation approach, to identify gaps in existing research relevant to limitations in rural suicide research and develop a set of guidelines to inform future research.
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Relative risk of elevated hearing threshold compared to ISO1999 normative populations for Royal Australian Air Force male personnel.
TL;DR: A new method for quantifying the probability of a clinically relevant hearing loss and the relative risk of the loss due to a risk factor is demonstrated on a study population of male Royal Australian Air Force personnel.
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An examination of the influences on New South Wales general practitioners regarding the provision of opioid substitution therapy.
Simon Holliday,Parker Magin,Christopher Oldmeadow,John Attia,John Attia,Janet Dunbabin,Julie-Marie Henry,Nicholas Lintzeris,Susan Goode,Adrian Dunlop +9 more
TL;DR: The pattern of motivating factors towards the psychological, social and behavioural challenges of the management of dependency has a predominantly negative bias, however, this lessens with postgraduate training and OSTP experience.
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Demographic and social-cognitive factors associated with gestational weight gain in an Australian pregnancy cohort
Shanna Fealy,John Attia,Lucy Leigh,Christopher Oldmeadow,Michael Hazelton,Maralyn Foureur,Clare E. Collins,Roger Smith,Alexis J. Hure +8 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that younger maternal age and lower perceived body image are predictive of excessive gestational weight gain.