T
Tanica Lyngdoh
Researcher at Public Health Foundation of India
Publications - 28
Citations - 1039
Tanica Lyngdoh is an academic researcher from Public Health Foundation of India. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 25 publications receiving 807 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
The Effect of Rural-to-Urban Migration on Obesity and Diabetes in India: A Cross-Sectional Study
Shah Ebrahim,Shah Ebrahim,Sanjay Kinra,Liza Bowen,Elizabeth Andersen,Yoav Ben-Shlomo,Tanica Lyngdoh,Lakshmy Ramakrishnan,R.C. Ahuja,Prashant P. Joshi,S. Mohan Das,Murali Mohan,George Davey Smith,Dorairaj Prabhakaran,K. Srinath Reddy +14 more
TL;DR: The investigators identify patterns of change of cardiovascular risk factors associated with urban migration and examine the distribution of obesity, diabetes, and other cardiovascular risk Factors among urban migrant factory workers in India.
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Sociodemographic patterning of non-communicable disease risk factors in rural India: a cross sectional study
Sanjay Kinra,Liza Bowen,Tanica Lyngdoh,Dorairaj Prabhakaran,Kolli Srinath Reddy,Lakshmy Ramakrishnan,Ruby Gupta,A. V. Bharathi,Mario Vaz,Anura V Kurpad,George Davey Smith,Yoav Ben-Shlomo,Shah Ebrahim +12 more
TL;DR: The prevalence of tobacco use in men and obesity in women was striking and the need for careful monitoring and control of non-communicable disease risk factors in rural areas of India is highlighted.
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Deciphering the COVID-19 cytokine storm: Systematic review and meta-analysis.
TL;DR: This work aimed to quantify the differences in the circulating levels of major inflammatory and immunological markers between severe and nonsevere COVID‐19 patients.
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Sib-recruitment for studying migration and its impact on obesity and diabetes
Tanica Lyngdoh,Sanjay Kinra,Yoav Ben Shlomo,Srinath Reddy,Dorairaj Prabhakaran,George Davey Smith,Shah Ebrahim +6 more
TL;DR: The sib-comparison design is robust and has been adopted in the main study and it is possible that simple urban-rural study designs under-estimate the true differences in diabetes risk between migrants and non-migrants.
Journal ArticleDOI
Association Between Urban Life-Years and Cardiometabolic Risk The Indian Migration Study
Sanjay Kinra,Elisabeth Wreford Andersen,Yoav Ben-Shlomo,Liza Bowen,Tanica Lyngdoh,Dorairaj Prabhakaran,Kolli Srinath Reddy,Lakshmy Ramakrishnan,A. V. Bharathi,Mario Vaz,Anura V Kurpad,George Davey Smith,Shah Ebrahim +12 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that body fat increases rapidly when one first moves to an urban environment, whereas other cardiometabolic risk factors evolve gradually.