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Manfred S. Green

Researcher at University of Haifa

Publications -  293
Citations -  9435

Manfred S. Green is an academic researcher from University of Haifa. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Incidence (epidemiology). The author has an hindex of 50, co-authored 281 publications receiving 8346 citations. Previous affiliations of Manfred S. Green include Tel Aviv University & Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

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Self-reported health as a cultural health determinant in Arab and Jewish Israelis MABAT--National Health and Nutrition Survey 1999-2001.

TL;DR: The findings indicate that SH in Jews and Arabs does not necessarily have the same meaning in relation to objective measures of health, and caution should be exercised in the use of this measure in different population groups with different cultures.
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Combined association of occupational and leisure-time physical activity with all-cause and coronary heart disease mortality among a cohort of men followed-up for 22 years

TL;DR: Moderate–hard OPA among industrial male workers may be deleterious to health and should not be a substitute to LTPA, while LTPA was associated with reduced risk for all-cause mortality.
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A national survey of acute cerebrovascular disease in Israel: burden, management, outcome and adherence to guidelines.

TL;DR: This national survey demonstrates the high burden of acute stroke in Israel and reveals discordance between existing guidelines and current practice, and highlights important areas for which reorganization is imperative for patients afflicted with acute stroke.
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Use of predictive value to adjust relative risk estimates biased by misclassification of outcome status

TL;DR: In this paper, exact and approximate formulae for the adjusted relative risk in terms of the predictive value of a positive test are derived and Hypothetical examples of epidemiologic studies of coronary artery disease are provided to illustrate the use of these formULae.
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Extreme and acquiescence bias in a bi-ethnic population.

TL;DR: Levels of response biases are higher in the Arab minority population compared with the majority Jewish population and depended on the subject, age and education.