S
Sankaran Subramanian
Researcher at Philippine Institute for Development Studies
Publications - 333
Citations - 27890
Sankaran Subramanian is an academic researcher from Philippine Institute for Development Studies. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Socioeconomic status. The author has an hindex of 74, co-authored 332 publications receiving 24680 citations. Previous affiliations of Sankaran Subramanian include Indian Institute of Science & Indian Institute of Technology Madras.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Sensitivity-enhanced two-dimensional heteronuclear shift correlation NMR spectroscopy
Ad Bax,Sankaran Subramanian +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a simple method that alleviates the dynamic range problem and that facilitates the suppression of signals from protons that are not coupled to the lowy nucleus is described, where the low-y nucleus was assumed to be 13C.
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The local food environment and diet: A systematic review
TL;DR: GIS-based measures were the most common measures, but were less consistently associated with diet than other measures, and few studies examined dimensions of affordability, accommodation, and acceptability.
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Income Inequality and Health: What Have We Learned So Far?
TL;DR: The average annual salary in America in inflation-adjusted 1998 dollars increased from $32,522 in 1970 to $35,864 in 1999, that is, a modest 10 percent increase over three decades, but recent trends in wealth inequality have been equally noteworthy.
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Anaemia in low-income and middle-income countries
TL;DR: Anaemia is disproportionately concentrated in low socioeconomic groups, and that maternal anaemia is strongly associated with child anaemia, and the epidemiology, clinical assessment, pathophysiology, and consequences of anaemia in low-income and middle-income countries are reviewed.
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Social Environment and Physical activity: A review of concepts and evidence
TL;DR: Five dimensions of the social environment are identified-social support and social networks, socioeconomic position and income inequality, racial discrimination, social cohesion and social capital, and neighborhood factors-and each is considered in the context of physical activity to illustrate important differences between them.