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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
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Total costs and predictors of costs in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus

TL;DR: Improvement in disease activity and physical health and prevention of end-organ damage may reduce costs in SLE and has a considerable impact on the health-care system and society.
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Antiplatelet therapy with aspirin, clopidogrel, and dipyridamole versus clopidogrel alone or aspirin and dipyridamole in patients with acute cerebral ischaemia (TARDIS): a randomised, open-label, phase 3 superiority trial

Philip M.W. Bath, +514 more
- 20 Dec 2017 - 
TL;DR: Among patients with recent cerebral ischaemia, intensive antiplatelet therapy did not reduce the incidence and severity of recurrent stroke or TIA, but did significantly increase the risk of major bleeding.
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Exercise‐based cardiac rehabilitation in heart transplant recipients

TL;DR: Exercise-based cardiac rehabilitation improves exercise capacity, but exercise was found to have no impact on health-related quality of life in the short-term (median 12 weeks follow-up), in heart transplant recipients whose health is stable.
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Comparison of a structured home-based rehabilitation programme with conventional supervised pulmonary rehabilitation: a randomised non-inferiority trial

TL;DR: There was inconclusive evidence that home-based PR was non-inferior to PR in dyspnoea (mean group difference, mITT: −0.24), favouring the centre group at 7 weeks, and further evidence is needed to definitively determine if the health benefits of the standardisedHome-based programme are non- inferior or equivalent to supervised centre-based rehabilitation.