J
John J. Reilly
Researcher at University of Strathclyde
Publications - 424
Citations - 30359
John J. Reilly is an academic researcher from University of Strathclyde. The author has contributed to research in topics: Body mass index & Childhood obesity. The author has an hindex of 79, co-authored 384 publications receiving 27034 citations. Previous affiliations of John J. Reilly include Education Scotland & University of Glasgow.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Compliance with a physical activity guideline among junior high school students
Chiaki Tanaka,Takafumi Abe,Rie Takenaga,Takahiro Suzuki,Shingo Noi,Shigeho Tanaka,Motohiko Miyachi,Shigeru Inoue,Youichi Hatamoto,John J. Reilly +9 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyzed data from the National Sports-Life Survey of Teens 2019, which used the Japanese version of physical activity (PA) questions in the World Health Organization Health Behavior in School-aged Children survey and potential correlates of MVPA.
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Public health surveillance of habitual physical activity in adolescents and adults in Namibia: a cross-sectional validation of activity questionnaires against accelerometry.
TL;DR: The PACE+ and GPAQ questionnaires have a degree of validity in adolescent girls and adult females in Namibia, though more suitable for population than individual level measurement.
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Assessing compounding risks across multiple systems and sectors: a socio-environmental systems risk-triage approach
C. Adam Schlosser,Cypress Frankenfeld,Sebastian D. Eastham,Xiang Gao,Angelo Gurgel,Alyssa McCluskey,Jennifer Morris,Sergey Paltsev,John J. Reilly +8 more
TL;DR: The System for the Triage of Risks from Environmental and Socio-Economic Stressors (STRESS) as mentioned in this paper is an open-science tool that brings together data across socio-environmental systems, economics, demographics, health, biodiversity and infrastructure.
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Comparative study between young children of different societies to evaluate the impact of feeding style on the nutritional status
TL;DR: Measurements of PFS in contemporary children from the two countries are presented, for the first time, but there was no evidence found for any impact of P FS on nutrient intake, nutritional status, or growth of children.