T
Tom Clemens
Researcher at University of Edinburgh
Publications - 35
Citations - 667
Tom Clemens is an academic researcher from University of Edinburgh. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 29 publications receiving 433 citations. Previous affiliations of Tom Clemens include University of St Andrews.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Changes in mortality inequalities over two decades: register based study of European countries.
Johan P. Mackenbach,Ivana Kulhánová,Barbara Artnik,Matthias Bopp,Carme Borrell,Tom Clemens,Giuseppe Costa,Chris Dibben,Ramune Kalediene,Olle Lundberg,Pekka Martikainen,Gwenn Menvielle,Olof Östergren,Remigijus Prochorskas,Maica Rodríguez-Sanz,Bjørn Heine Strand,Caspar W. N. Looman,Rianne de Gelder +17 more
TL;DR: Over the past two decades, trends in inequalities in mortality have been more favourable in most European countries than is commonly assumed.
Journal ArticleDOI
Maternal exposure to ambient air pollution and fetal growth in North-East Scotland: A population-based study using routine ultrasound scans.
TL;DR: Fetal growth is strongly associated with particulates exposure from later in second trimester onwards but the effect appears to be subsumed by smoking.
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Place of work and residential exposure to ambient air pollution and birth outcomes in Scotland, using geographically fine pollution climate mapping estimates
Chris Dibben,Tom Clemens +1 more
TL;DR: This study highlights the association between air pollution exposure and reduced newborn size at birth and suggests that exposure estimation based on the nearest monitor method may have led to an under-estimation of the effect size of pollutants on birth outcomes.
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What is the effect of unemployment on all-cause mortality? A cohort study using propensity score matching.
TL;DR: The findings support the notion that the often-observed association between unemployment and mortality may contain a significant causal component; although for women, there is less support for this conclusion.
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The influence of residential and workday population mobility on exposure to air pollution in the UK
Stefan Reis,Tomas Liska,Massimo Vieno,E.J. Carnell,Rachel Beck,Tom Clemens,Ulrike Dragosits,Sam Tomlinson,David Leaver,Mathew R. Heal +9 more
TL;DR: This study combines new UK Census data comprising information on workday population densities, with high spatio-temporal resolution air pollution concentration fields from the WRF-EMEP4UK atmospheric chemistry transport model, to derive more realistic estimates of population exposure to NO2, PM2.5 and O3.