M
Martin O'Flaherty
Researcher at University of Liverpool
Publications - 271
Citations - 19465
Martin O'Flaherty is an academic researcher from University of Liverpool. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Mortality rate. The author has an hindex of 48, co-authored 245 publications receiving 15089 citations. Previous affiliations of Martin O'Flaherty include Austral University & Health Science University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Potential impact of diabetes prevention on mortality and future burden of dementia and disability: a modelling study
Piotr Bandosz,Sara Ahmadi-Abhari,Sara Ahmadi-Abhari,Maria Guzman-Castillo,Maria Guzman-Castillo,Jonathan Pearson-Stuttard,Jonathan Pearson-Stuttard,Brendan Collins,Hannah R Whittaker,Martin J. Shipley,Simon Capewell,Eric J. Brunner,Martin O'Flaherty +12 more
TL;DR: Reducing the burden of diabetes could result in substantial reductions in the incidence of dementia and disability over the medium to long term.
Journal ArticleDOI
Fruit and vegetable consumption and non-communicable disease: time to update the ‘5 a day’ message?
TL;DR: The current landscape in nutritional epidemiology research is blighted by an oversaturation of contradictory evidence which risks confusing policy makers, journalists and public about what aspects of the Western diet deserve attention and then intervention.
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Context-led capacity building in time of crisis: fostering non-communicable diseases (NCD) research skills in the Mediterranean Middle East and North Africa.
Peter Phillimore,Abla M. Sibai,Anthony Rizk,Wasim Maziak,Belgin Ünal,Niveen M E Abu Rmeileh,Habiba Ben Romdhane,Fouad M. Fouad,Yousef Khader,Kathleen Bennett,Shahaduz Zaman,Awad Mataria,Rula Ghandour,Bülent Kiliç,Nadia Ben Mansour,Ibtihal Fadhil,Martin O'Flaherty,Simon Capewell,Julia A Critchley +18 more
TL;DR: This programme to strengthen research capacity for one priority area of global public health took place as a narrow window of political opportunity was closing, and the key lessons concern issues of sustainability and the paramount importance of responsively shaping a context-driven RCB.
Tenancy databases: risk minimisation and outcomes
Patricia Short,John Minnery,Elspeth Mead,Barbara Adkins,Andrew Peake,Debbie Fedrick,Martin O'Flaherty +6 more
Journal ArticleDOI
Future trends and inequalities in premature coronary deaths in England:modelling study
Kirk Allen,Kirk Allen,Duncan Gillespie,Maria Guzman-Castillo,Peter J. Diggle,Simon Capewell,Martin O'Flaherty +6 more
TL;DR: Overall, premature coronary death rates in England continue to decline steeply, and absolute inequalities are decreasing, reflecting declines in the high premature mortality in deprived groups, however, relative inequalities are projected to widen further, reflecting slower mortality decline in the most deprived groups.