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Sandro Galea

Researcher at Boston University

Publications -  1221
Citations -  70071

Sandro Galea is an academic researcher from Boston University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Poison control. The author has an hindex of 115, co-authored 1129 publications receiving 58396 citations. Previous affiliations of Sandro Galea include University of California, Berkeley & Dartmouth College.

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Coping Behavior and Risk of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder Among Federal Disaster Responders.

TL;DR: It is found that in disaster responders exposed to traumatic disaster events, the likelihood of probable PTSD can be influenced by individual coping behavior style and other covariates.
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Epigenetic predictors of all-cause mortality are associated with objective measures of neighborhood disadvantage in an urban population

TL;DR: Objective measures of neighborhood disadvantage are significantly associated with an epigenetic predictor of mortality risk, presenting a potential novel avenue by which neighborhood-level exposures may impact health.
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Predicting the Population Health Impacts of Community Interventions: The Case of Alcohol Outlets and Binge Drinking

TL;DR: A substitution estimator can be used to predict how shifts in population exposures might change health and improve the translation of public health research results to practitioners by estimating population intervention parameters.
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Pandemic March: 2019 Coronavirus Disease's First Wave Circumnavigates the Globe.

TL;DR: March 2020 was a consequential month when the COVID-19 pandemic wrapped completely around the planet, with outbreaks erupting in most nations worldwide.
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Drug and alcohol use as determinants of New York City homicide trends from 1990 to 1998.

TL;DR: Changing patterns of drug and alcohol use by homicide victims were comparable to changing patterns of alcohol use in accident victims, suggesting that changes in drug andalcohol use among homicide victims between 1990 and 1998 cannot solely explain the decline in NYC homicide rates.