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Stephen Bright
Researcher at Edith Cowan University
Publications - 50
Citations - 673
Stephen Bright is an academic researcher from Edith Cowan University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Computer science. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 35 publications receiving 400 citations. Previous affiliations of Stephen Bright include Curtin University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Inhaled budesonide in the treatment of early COVID-19 (STOIC): a phase 2, open-label, randomised controlled trial.
Sanjay Ramakrishnan,Sanjay Ramakrishnan,Sanjay Ramakrishnan,Dan V. Nicolau,Dan V. Nicolau,Dan V. Nicolau,Beverly Langford,Beverly Langford,Mahdi Mahdi,Mahdi Mahdi,Helen Jeffers,Helen Jeffers,Christine Mwasuku,Christine Mwasuku,Karolina Krassowska,Karolina Krassowska,Robin Fox,Ian Binnian,Victoria Glover,Stephen Bright,Christopher C Butler,Jennifer L Cane,Jennifer L Cane,Andreas Halner,Philippa C Matthews,Philippa C Matthews,Louise E. Donnelly,Jodie L. Simpson,Jonathan R. Baker,Nabil T. Fadai,Stefan Peterson,Thomas Bengtsson,Peter J. Barnes,Richard Russell,Richard Russell,Mona Bafadhel,Mona Bafadhel +36 more
TL;DR: In this paper, an open-label, parallel-group, phase 2, randomised controlled trial (Steroids in COVID-19; STOIC) of inhaled budesonide, compared with usual care, in adults within 7 days of the onset of mild COPD symptoms was performed in the community in Oxfordshire, UK.
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Kronic hysteria: exploring the intersection between Australian synthetic cannabis legislation, the media, and drug-related harm.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore the relationship between media reports, policy responses, and drug-related harm in Australia and find that the number of media stories published online connected strongly with Google searches for the term Kronic, and also the amount of traffic searching for these terms.
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What can we say about substance use? Dominant discourses and narratives emergent from Australian media
TL;DR: In this paper, context-specific frameworks that constrain what can be presented as rational when considering psychoactive substances are conceptualised as context specific frameworks, and the implications of this for Australian discourse are discussed.
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Synthesis and pharmacology of new psychoactive substance 5F-CUMYL-P7AICA, a scaffold- hopping analog of synthetic cannabinoid receptor agonists 5F-CUMYL-PICA and 5F-CUMYL-PINACA
Samuel D. Banister,Axel Adams,Richard C. Kevin,Christa MacDonald,Michelle Glass,Rochelle Boyd,Mark Connor,Iain S. McGregor,Christopher Havel,Stephen Bright,Stephen Bright,Mireia Ventura Vilamala,Cristina Gil Lladanosa,Monica J. Barratt,Monica J. Barratt,Monica J. Barratt,Roy Gerona +16 more
TL;DR: Five scaffold-hopping SCRAs, including 5F-CUMYL-P7AICA, were synthesized and characterized and found to exert potent cannabimimetic effects in mice, inducing hypothermia through a CB1 -dependent mechanism.
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NBOMe - a very different kettle of fish . . .
TL;DR: It is concerned that recent media reports about a 17-year-old Sydney boy who died after allegedly consuming 25Bor 25I-NBOMe might lead to an increase in the incidence of NBOMe toxicity among patients presenting to emergency departments.