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Robert G. Cumming

Researcher at University of Sydney

Publications -  524
Citations -  42107

Robert G. Cumming is an academic researcher from University of Sydney. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Poison control. The author has an hindex of 97, co-authored 515 publications receiving 38309 citations. Previous affiliations of Robert G. Cumming include University of New South Wales & Neuroscience Research Australia.

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Caregiving in the Presence of Chronic Pain

TL;DR: The joint impact of chronic pain and primary caregiving on older people and chronic pain status should be ascertained in older people who are caregivers, with particular attention to the issue of caregiver psychological distress and physical well-being.
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Prospective Associations Between Dietary Antioxidant Intake and Frailty in Older Australian Men: The Concord Health and Ageing in Men Project.

TL;DR: Poor antioxidant intake, particularly vitamin E, is a plausible factor associated with incident frailty among older men, and supports the need for clinical trials of diets rich in antioxidants or possibly low-dose antioxidant supplements, for prevention of frailty.
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Footwear and Hip Fracture‐related Fails in Older People

TL;DR: Feature descriptions of footwear worn at the time of hip fracture‐related falls are described to describe features of footwear used in accident and emergency departments.
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The Double Burden: Barriers and Facilitators to Socioeconomic Inclusion for Women with Disability in Bangladesh

TL;DR: Practical interventions through both up-scaling and expansion of disability-specific programming and sustained policy implementation are required to facilitate individual empowerment and better health outcomes for women with disability in Bangladesh.
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Of Older Mice and Men: Branched-Chain Amino Acids and Body Composition

TL;DR: Body weight and body fat were positively associated with circulating BCAA levels in both mouse and human, which remained significant after adjustments for age, physical activity, number of morbidities, smoking status, and source of income in the human cohort.