S
Shantini Paranjothy
Researcher at University of Aberdeen
Publications - 133
Citations - 3835
Shantini Paranjothy is an academic researcher from University of Aberdeen. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Pregnancy. The author has an hindex of 29, co-authored 116 publications receiving 3192 citations. Previous affiliations of Shantini Paranjothy include Cochrane Collaboration & Cardiff and Vale University Health Board.
Papers
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The National Sentinel Caesarean Section Audit Report
J. Thomas,Shantini Paranjothy +1 more
TL;DR: This report presents the findings of the national audit of caesarean section rates in England, Wales and Northern Ireland and provides an overview of the main results and a detailed description of the methodology.
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Effect of preterm birth on later FEV1: a systematic review and meta-analysis
Sarah J. Kotecha,Martin Edwards,W. John Watkins,A. John Henderson,Shantini Paranjothy,Frank David John Dunstan,Sailesh Kotecha +6 more
TL;DR: %FEV1 is decreased in preterm-born survivors, even those who do not develop bronchopulmonary dysplasia, and %FEV 1 of survivors of BPD28 has improved over recent years.
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Teenage pregnancy: who suffers?
TL;DR: Pregnancy and childbirth during the teenage years are associated with increased risk of poorer health and well-being for both the mother and the baby, possibly reflecting the socio-economic factors that precede early pregnancy and childbirth.
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Fibrin-based clot formation as an early and rapid biomarker for progression of postpartum hemorrhage: a prospective study
Peter William Collins,Peter William Collins,Graeme Lilley,Daniel Bruynseels,David Burkett-St. Laurent,Rebecca Cannings-John,Elizabeth Precious,Vincent Hamlyn,Julia Sanders,Julia Sanders,Raza Alikhan,Rachel Rayment,Alexandra Rees,Abigail Kaye,Judith Elizabeth Hall,Judith Elizabeth Hall,Shantini Paranjothy,Andrew Weeks,R. E. Collis +18 more
TL;DR: Fibtem is a rapidly available early biomarker for progression of PPH and was an independent predictor for progression to bleeds >2500 mL on multivariate analysis.
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Effect of late preterm birth on longitudinal lung spirometry in school age children and adolescents
Sarah J. Kotecha,W. John Watkins,Shantini Paranjothy,Frank David John Dunstan,A. John Henderson,Sailesh Kotecha +5 more
TL;DR: Children born at 33–34 weeks gestation have significantly lower lung function values at 8–9 years of age, similar to decrements observed in the 25–32-week group, although some improvements were noted by 14–17 years of age.