N
Niels Peek
Researcher at University of Manchester
Publications - 275
Citations - 5832
Niels Peek is an academic researcher from University of Manchester. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Health care. The author has an hindex of 37, co-authored 238 publications receiving 4184 citations. Previous affiliations of Niels Peek include RMIT University & University of Amsterdam.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Body mass index is associated with hospital mortality in critically ill patients: an observational cohort study.
Peter Pickkers,Nicolette F. de Keizer,Joost Dusseljee,Daan Weerheijm,Johannes G. van der Hoeven,Niels Peek +5 more
TL;DR: This large observational database shows an inverse association between obesity and hospital mortality in critically ill patients that could not be explained by a variety of known confounders.
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Clinical Performance Feedback Intervention Theory (CP-FIT): a new theory for designing, implementing, and evaluating feedback in health care based on a systematic review and meta-synthesis of qualitative research
Benjamin Brown,Wouter T. Gude,Thomas Blakeman,Sabine N. van der Veer,Noah Ivers,Jill J Francis,Jill J Francis,Fabiana Lorencatto,Justin Presseau,Justin Presseau,Niels Peek,Gavin Daker-White +11 more
TL;DR: This is the first qualitative meta-synthesis of feedback interventions, and the first comprehensive theory of feedback designed specifically for health care, which builds on 30 pre-existing theories and has 42 high-confidence hypotheses.
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Clinical and cost-effectiveness of home-based cardiac rehabilitation compared to conventional, centre-based cardiac rehabilitation: Results of the FIT@Home study
Jos J. Kraal,M. Elske van den Akker-van Marle,Ameen Abu-Hanna,Wim Stut,Niels Peek,Hareld M. C. Kemps +5 more
TL;DR: It is concluded that home-basedTraining with telemonitoring guidance can be used as an alternative to centre-based training for low-to-moderate cardiac risk patients entering cardiac rehabilitation and appears to be more cost-effective than centre- based training.
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Diagnosis of physical and mental health conditions in primary care during the COVID-19 pandemic: a retrospective cohort study.
Richard Williams,Richard Williams,David A. Jenkins,David A. Jenkins,Darren M. Ashcroft,Ben Brown,Stephen Campbell,Matthew J. Carr,Sudeh Cheraghi-Sohi,Navneet Kapur,Owain Thomas,Roger T. Webb,Niels Peek,Niels Peek +13 more
TL;DR: In this deprived urban population, diagnoses of common conditions decreased substantially between March and May 2020, suggesting a large number of patients have undiagnosed conditions.
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The comorbidity burden of type 2 diabetes mellitus: patterns, clusters and predictions from a large English primary care cohort
Magdalena Nowakowska,Salwa S Zghebi,Darren M. Ashcroft,Darren M. Ashcroft,Iain Buchan,Iain Buchan,Carolyn Chew-Graham,Tim Holt,Christian D Mallen,Harm W.J. van Marwijk,Niels Peek,Niels Peek,Rafael Perera-Salazar,David Reeves,David Reeves,Martin K. Rutter,Martin K. Rutter,Stephen Weng,Nadeem Qureshi,Mamas A. Mamas,Evangelos Kontopantelis +20 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used the Clinical Practice Research Datalink (CPRD) linked with the Index of Multiple Deprivation (IMD) data to identify patients diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes between 2007 and 2017.