M
Matthew P. Fox
Researcher at Boston University
Publications - 337
Citations - 14658
Matthew P. Fox is an academic researcher from Boston University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 57, co-authored 300 publications receiving 12378 citations. Previous affiliations of Matthew P. Fox include University of Minnesota & University of the Witwatersrand.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Prioritizing health outcomes of HIV-exposed, uninfected children in low and middle-income countries: response to Powis et al.
Alana T. Brennan,Rachael Bonawitz,Christopher J. Gill,Donald M. Thea,Lawrence Long,Matthew P. Fox +5 more
TL;DR: This analysis focuses on mortality, as this is an unambiguous outcome and a number of other factors often not reported in these studies, such as maternal health and functional care-taking status, infant feeding modality, nutritional status, and comorbidities such as infant malaria or other parasitic infections.
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PS-SiZer map to investigate significant features of body-weight profile changes in HIV infected patients in the IeDEA Collaboration.
Jaroslaw Harezlak,Samiha Sarwat,Kara Wools-Kaloustian,Michael Schomaker,Eric Balestre,Matthew Law,Sasisopin Kiertiburanakul,Matthew P. Fox,Diana Huis in ‘t Veld,Beverly S. Musick,Constantin T. Yiannoutsos +10 more
TL;DR: A penalized spline SiZer (PS-SiZer) is proposed which can be expressed as a linear mixed model of the longitudinal biomarker process to account for irregularly collected data and within-subject correlations and is sensitive in detecting even subtle features in biomarker curves.
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Preconception periodontitis and risk of spontaneous abortion in a prospective cohort study.
Julia C. Bond,Lauren A. Wise,Matthew P. Fox,Raul I. Garcia,Eleanor J Murray,Katharine O. White,Kenneth J. Rothman,Elizabeth E. Hatch,Brenda Heaton +8 more
TL;DR: In this article , the authors evaluated the association between periodontitis and spontaneous abortion (SAB) using data from Pregnancy Study Online (PRESTO), a prospective preconception cohort study of 3,444 pregnancy planners.
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Epidemiologic questions require context.
TL;DR: Lesko et al. as mentioned in this paper proposed a method for answering epidemiological questions using context. But they did not consider the context of the questions in their paper, which was published in the American Journal of Epidemiology (AJE).
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Causal language from observational studies in medical and epidemiological literature: a systematic literature review
Noah Haber,Sarah Wieten,Julia M. Rohrer,Onyebuchi A. Arah,Peter W. G. Tennant,Elizabeth A. Stuart,Eleanor J Murray,Sophie Pilleron,S. Lam,Eric Riederer,S. Howcutt,A.E. Ãmons,Clemence Leyrat,Philipp Schoenegger,A. Booman,Mi-Suk Kang Dufour,A.L. O’Donoghue,Roberto Baglini,Stanley Grogg Do,M.D.L.R. Takashima,T. R. Evans,Daloha Rodríguez-Molina,T. Alsalti,Daniel J. Dunleavy,Gideon Meyerowitz-Katz,Angelo Antonietti,José Andrés Calvache,Mark Kelson,Meg G Salvia,Camila Olarte Parra,Saman Khalatbari-Soltani,Taylor McLinden,Arthur Chatton,Jessie Seiler,Alexandra Steriu,Talal S. Alshihayb,Sarah Twardowski,Julia Dabravolskaj,Ekere Au,Rachel A. Hoopsick,Sneha Suresh,Natasha Judd,Sendoa Ballesteros Peña,Cathrine Axfors,P. . Khan,A. E. Rivera Aguirre,Nnaemeka U. Odo,Ian Schmid,Matthew P. Fox +48 more