S
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.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Neighborhood Poverty and Injection Cessation in a Sample of Injection Drug Users
Arijit Nandi,Arijit Nandi,Thomas A. Glass,Stephen R. Cole,Haitao Chu,Sandro Galea,David D. Celentano,Gregory D. Kirk,David Vlahov,William W. Latimer,Shruti H. Mehta +10 more
TL;DR: Results show that neighborhood environment may be an important determinant of drug injection behavior independent of individual-level characteristics and show a strong association between neighborhood poverty and injection drug use cessation.
Journal ArticleDOI
Who conceals their smoking status from their health care provider
Jennifer Stuber,Sandro Galea +1 more
TL;DR: A small percentage of smokers may conceal their smoking status from their health care providers, and those who do are more likely to perceive their tobacco use to be socially unacceptable.
Journal ArticleDOI
Harms of public health interventions against covid-19 must not be ignored.
TL;DR: The harmful consequences of public health choices should be explicitly considered and transparently reported to limit their damage, say Itai Bavli and colleagues.
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Mental health during and after protests, riots and revolutions: A systematic review.
Michael Y. Ni,Yoona Kim,Ian McDowell,Suki Wong,Hong Qiu,Irene Ol Wong,Sandro Galea,Gabriel M. Leung +7 more
TL;DR: There is compelling evidence that protests even when nonviolent can be associated with adverse mental health outcomes, and health care professionals need to be vigilant to the mental and psychological sequelae of protests, riots and revolutions.
Journal ArticleDOI
Structural relations between DSM-5 PTSD and major depression symptoms in military soldiers.
Jon D. Elhai,Ateka A. Contractor,Marijo Tamburrino,Thomas H. Fine,Gregory H. Cohen,Edwin Shirley,Philip K. Chan,Israel Liberzon,Joseph R. Calabrese,Sandro Galea +9 more
TL;DR: Results indicated that in contrast to other PTSD factors, PTSDs dysphoria factor was more related to MDD somatic and non-somatic factors, including whether PTSD should be refined by removing its non-specific symptoms.