P
Paul T. Seed
Researcher at King's College London
Publications - 506
Citations - 24728
Paul T. Seed is an academic researcher from King's College London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pregnancy & Randomized controlled trial. The author has an hindex of 79, co-authored 472 publications receiving 21311 citations. Previous affiliations of Paul T. Seed include University of London & HealthPartners.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Effect of antioxidants on the occurrence of pre-eclampsia in women at increased risk: a randomised trial
Lucy C Chappell,Paul T. Seed,Annette Briley,Frank J. Kelly,Rosalind Lee,Beverley J. Hunt,Kiran Parmar,Susan Bewley,Andrew Shennan,Philip J. Steer,Lucilla Poston +10 more
TL;DR: Multicentre trials are needed to show whether vitamin supplementation affects the occurrence of pre-eclampsia in low-risk women and to confirm the results in larger groups of high- risk women from different populations.
Journal ArticleDOI
Vitamin C and vitamin E in pregnant women at risk for pre-eclampsia (VIP trial): randomised placebo-controlled trial.
TL;DR: Concomitant supplementation with vitamin C and vitamin E does not prevent pre-eclampsia in women at risk, but does increase the rate of babies born with a low birthweight, and use of these high-dose antioxidants is not justified in pregnancy.
Journal ArticleDOI
Development and evaluation of evidence based risk assessment tool (STRATIFY) to predict which elderly inpatients will fall: case-control and cohort studies
TL;DR: This simple risk assessment tool predicted with clinically useful sensitivity and specificity a high percentage of falls among elderly hospital inpatients.
Journal ArticleDOI
Effect of a behavioural intervention in obese pregnant women (the UPBEAT study): a multicentre, randomised controlled trial
Lucilla Poston,Ruth Bell,Helen Croker,Angela C. Flynn,Keith M. Godfrey,Louise M Goff,Louise Hayes,Nina Khazaezadeh,Scott M. Nelson,Eugene Oteng-Ntim,Dharmintra Pasupathy,Nashita Patel,Stephen C. Robson,Jane Sandall,Thomas A. B. Sanders,Naveed Sattar,Paul T. Seed,Jane Wardle,Melissa Whitworth,Annette Briley +19 more
TL;DR: The primary outcomes did not differ between groups, despite improvements in some maternal secondary outcomes in the intervention group, including reduced dietary glycaemic load, gestational weight gain, and maternal sum-of-skinfold thicknesses, and increased physical activity.
Journal ArticleDOI
Chronic hypertension and pregnancy outcomes: systematic review and meta-analysis.
TL;DR: This systematic review, reporting meta-analysed data from studies of pregnant women with chronic hypertension, shows that adverse outcomes of pregnancy are common and emphasises a need for heightened antenatal surveillance.