R
Rod S Taylor
Researcher at Robertson Centre for Biostatistics
Publications - 558
Citations - 46254
Rod S Taylor is an academic researcher from Robertson Centre for Biostatistics. The author has contributed to research in topics: Randomized controlled trial & Rehabilitation. The author has an hindex of 104, co-authored 524 publications receiving 39332 citations. Previous affiliations of Rod S Taylor include Peninsula College of Medicine and Dentistry & United Nations Industrial Development Organization.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Cardiac rehabilitation meta-analysis of trials in patients with coronary heart disease using individual participant data (CaReMATCH): Project protocol.
Benjamin J R Buckley,Geert Kleinnibbelink,Geert Kleinnibbelink,Gregory Y.H. Lip,Rod S Taylor,Dick H. J. Thijssen,Dick H. J. Thijssen +6 more
TL;DR: This CR meta-analysis of trials in patients with coronary heart disease using individual participant data (IPD) seeks to provide definitive estimates of the effectiveness of CR in terms of all-cause mortality, cardiovascular mortality, hospitalisation and health-related quality of life, and determine the influence of individual patient characteristics to inform a personalised CR-approach.
Journal ArticleDOI
Reply to Sharma et al.
Rui V. Duarte,Sarah J Nevitt,Ewan McNicol,Rod S Taylor,Eric Buchser,Richard B. North,Sam Eldabe +6 more
TL;DR: Systematic review and meta-analysis of placebo/sham controlled randomised trials of spinal cord stimulation for neuropathic pain and ethical issues in stopping randomized trials early because of apparent benefit.
Journal ArticleDOI
Behavioural activation training for depression - Authors' reply.
Journal ArticleDOI
O052 / #884 10-khz spinal cord stimulation is a durable treatment for painful diabetic neuropathy: long-term multicenter randomized controlled trial results
Erika A. Petersen,Thomas Stauss,James Scowcroft,Elizabeth S. Brooks,Judith L White,S. Sills,Kasra Amirdelfan,Maged Guirguis,Jijun Xu,Cong Yu,Ali Nairizi,Denis G. Patterson,Vincent Galan,Richard Bundschu,Neel Mehta,Dawood Sayed,Shivanand P. Lad,David J. DiBenedetto,Khalid A Sethi,Paul Wu,Charles Argoff,Christian Nasr,Rod S Taylor,David Caraway,Nagy Mekhail +24 more
TL;DR: In this paper , the 6-month published data of the prospective, multicenter, randomized, controlled trial (SENZA-PDN) demonstrated 10 kHz spinal cord stimulation (SCS) substantially relieves pain and may improve sensation in patients with refractory symptoms.