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.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Systematic review of the clinical and cost effectiveness of digital hearing aids.
TL;DR: The evidence identified by this review provides no significant evidence of the clinical benefit of digital devices compared to analogue-based aids, and these results are difficult to generalize to current UK practice.
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Patients' preference for exercise setting and its influence on the health benefits gained from exercise-based cardiac rehabilitation.
Lars Hermann Tang,Lars Hermann Tang,Lars Hermann Tang,Selina Kikkenborg Berg,Jan Christensen,Jan Christensen,Jannik Lawaetz,Jannik Lawaetz,Jannik Lawaetz,Patrick Doherty,Rod S Taylor,Henning Langberg,Ann-Dorthe Zwisler,Ann-Dorthe Zwisler +13 more
TL;DR: The preference of patients to participate in home-based and centre-based exercise programmes appears to be equivalent and provides similar health benefits, which support that patients should be given the choice between exercise-settings when initiating cardiac rehabilitation.
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An exercise intervention to prevent falls in Parkinson's: an economic evaluation.
TL;DR: There is high probability that the exercise intervention for PwP who were at risk of falling is cost-effective compared with usual care, and analyses indicate that this results require confirmation by larger trial-based economic evaluations and over the longer term.
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Neonatal hearing screening: modelling cost and effectiveness of hospital- and community-based screening.
TL;DR: Assessment of costs and effectiveness for hospital and community-based newborn hearing screening systems in England based on data from this first phase with regard to the effects of alterations to parameter values finds no statistically significant difference between hospital andcommunity in prevalence, test sensitivity, test specificity and costs.
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The Healthy Lifestyles Programme (HeLP), a novel school-based intervention to prevent obesity in school children: study protocol for a randomised controlled trial
Katrina Wyatt,Jennifer J Lloyd,Charles Abraham,Siobhan Creanor,Sarah Dean,Emma Densham,Wendy Daurge,Colin Green,Melvyn Hillsdon,Virginia Pearson,Rod S Taylor,Richard Tomlinson,Stuart Logan +12 more
TL;DR: A cluster randomised controlled trial to evaluate the effectiveness and cost effectiveness of the Healthy Lifestyles Programme, using highly interactive and creative delivery methods to prevent obesity in children from the southwest of England.