M
Mark Ashworth
Researcher at King's College London
Publications - 279
Citations - 6537
Mark Ashworth is an academic researcher from King's College London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 37, co-authored 245 publications receiving 5284 citations. Previous affiliations of Mark Ashworth include University of Cambridge.
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The Relationship between Asthma and Depression in Primary Care Patients: A Historical Cohort and Nested Case Control Study
TL;DR: Asthma is associated with depression, and a diagnosis of depression is related to health seeking behavior in patients with asthma, suggesting that case-finding for depression in this population should be given.
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Association between antibiotics and gut microbiome dysbiosis in children: systematic review and meta-analysis.
Lucy McDonnell,Alexander Gilkes,Mark Ashworth,Victoria Rowland,Tim Harries,David Armstrong,Patrick White +6 more
TL;DR: Antibiotics in childhood have been linked with diseases including asthma, juvenile arthritis, type 1 diabetes, Crohn's disease and mental illness as discussed by the authors, and the underlying mechanisms are thought related to d...
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Ethnic isolation and psychosis: re-examining the ethnic density effect
TL;DR: Ethnic density is inversely related to psychosis incidence at a detailed local neighbourhood level and at ward level this association was much weaker and no longer statistically significant.
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Which practices are high antibiotic prescribers? A cross-sectional analysis
TL;DR: Practice and practice population characteristics explained about one-sixth of the variation in antibiotic prescribing nationally, and practice location in the north of England was the strongest predictor of high antibiotic prescribing.
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Developing a computer delivered, theory based intervention for guideline implementation in general practice
TL;DR: Acceptability and satisfaction with computer-delivered prompts to follow guidelines may be increased by working with practitioners to ensure that the prompts will be perceived as valuable tools that can support GPs' practice.