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Peter S. Morris

Researcher at Charles Darwin University

Publications -  223
Citations -  7128

Peter S. Morris is an academic researcher from Charles Darwin University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Otitis & Population. The author has an hindex of 43, co-authored 205 publications receiving 6312 citations. Previous affiliations of Peter S. Morris include Flinders University & Queensland University of Technology.

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Effect of timing of umbilical cord clamping of term infants on maternal and neonatal outcomes

TL;DR: A more liberal approach to delaying clamping of the umbilical cord in healthy term infants appears to be warranted, in light of early iron stores in haemoglobin concentrations, which is likely delayed that jaundice is available for long as access to phototherapy requiring phototherapy.
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Otitis media in young Aboriginal children from remote communities in Northern and Central Australia: a cross-sectional survey

TL;DR: Overall, 1 in every 2 children examined had otoscopic signs consistent with suppurative ear disease and 1 in 4 children had a perforated tympanic membrane.
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Deriving accurate microbiota profiles from human samples with low bacterial content through post-sequencing processing of Illumina MiSeq data

TL;DR: A workflow based on the paired-end read Illumina MiSeq-based approach, which enables significant improvement in data quality, post-sequencing, and demonstrates its utility in removing the spurious signal from the dataset, allowing clinical insight to be derived from what would otherwise be highly misleading output.
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The Effectiveness of Energy Feedback for Conservation and Peak Demand: A Literature Review

TL;DR: In this paper, a review of electricity consumption feedback literature is presented to explore the potential of electricity feedback to affect residential consumers' electricity usage patterns, highlighting the debate over the effectiveness of different feedback criteria to residential customer acceptance and overall conservation and peak demand reduction.
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Measuring nasal bacterial load and its association with otitis media

TL;DR: Nasal bacterial load was significantly higher among Aboriginal children and may explain their increased risk of suppurative OM, and a reduction in bacterial load in high-risk populations may be required before dramatic reductions in OM can be achieved.