Institution
Royal Hallamshire Hospital
Healthcare•Sheffield, United Kingdom•
About: Royal Hallamshire Hospital is a healthcare organization based out in Sheffield, United Kingdom. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Randomized controlled trial. The organization has 5913 authors who have published 8425 publications receiving 314424 citations.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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3,880 citations
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TL;DR: These evidence‐based guidelines offer practical recommendations on the diagnosis and general management of hemophilia, as well as the management of complications including musculoskeletal issues, inhibitors, and transfusion‐transmitted infections.
Abstract: Hemophilia is a rare disorder that is complex to diagnose and to manage. These evidence-based guidelines offer practical recommendations on the diagnosis and general management of hemophilia, as well as the management of complications including musculoskeletal issues, inhibitors, and transfusion-transmitted infections. By compiling these guidelines, the World Federation of Hemophilia aims to assist healthcare providers seeking to initiate and/or maintain hemophilia care programs, encourage practice harmonization around the world and, where recommendations lack adequate evidence, stimulate appropriate studies.
1,733 citations
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Royal Hallamshire Hospital1, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center2, University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center3, Université de Montréal4, McGill University5, Radboud University Nijmegen6, Mario Negri Institute for Pharmacological Research7, Cornell University8, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center9
TL;DR: UBC is a frequently occurring malignancy with a significant impact on public health and will remain so because of the high prevalence of smoking and the importance of primary prevention must be stressed and smoking cessation programs need to be encouraged and supported.
1,601 citations
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TL;DR: These guidelines, commissioned by the Clinical Services’ Committee of the British Society of Gastroenterology, provide an evidence based document describing good clinical practice for investigation and treatment of patients with IBD in the United Kingdom.
Abstract: Ulcerative colitis (UC) and Crohn’s disease (CD) (collectively termed inflammatory bowel disease (IBD)) are complex disorders reflected by wide variation in clinical practice. These guidelines, commissioned by the Clinical Services’ Committee of the British Society of Gastroenterology (BSG) for clinicians and allied professionals caring for patients with IBD in the United Kingdom, provide an evidence based document describing good clinical practice for investigation and treatment. The guidelines are intended to bring consistency, but should not necessarily be regarded as the standard of care for all patients. Individual cases must be managed on the basis of all clinical data available for that case. Patient preferences should be sought and decisions jointly made between patient and health professional.
### 1.1 Development of guidelines
A comprehensive literature search was performed using electronic databases (Medline, PubMed, and Ovid; keywords: “inflammatory bowel disease”, “ulcerative colitis”, and “Crohn’s disease”) by Dr Carter. A preliminary document was drafted by Dr Carter, Dr Lobo, and contributing authors. This was summarised by Dr Travis and revised after circulation first to the committee and then to members of the IBD section of the BSG, before submission to the Clinical Services’ Committee.
### 1.2 Grading of recommendations1
The guidelines conform to the North of England evidence based guidelines development project. The grading of each recommendation is dependent on the category of evidence supporting it:
### 1.3 Scheduled review of guidelines
The content and evidence base …
1,471 citations
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TL;DR: Early diagnosis of PAH remains difficult, and screening programs in asymptomatic patients are feasible only in high-risk populations, particularly in patients with systemic sclerosis, for whom recent data suggest that a combination of clinical assessment and pulmonary function testing has a higher predictive value than echocardiography alone.
1,372 citations
Authors
Showing all 5933 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Nilesh J. Samani | 149 | 779 | 113545 |
Rafi Ahmed | 146 | 633 | 93190 |
Christopher Hill | 144 | 1562 | 128098 |
John A. Kanis | 133 | 625 | 96992 |
Peter Simmonds | 131 | 823 | 62953 |
Graeme I. Bell | 127 | 531 | 61011 |
Michael Horowitz | 112 | 982 | 46952 |
Peter H.R. Green | 106 | 843 | 60113 |
Edith V. Sullivan | 101 | 455 | 34502 |
Pamela J. Shaw | 101 | 506 | 34008 |
Mark H. Wilcox | 95 | 600 | 34834 |
Eugene V. McCloskey | 94 | 544 | 41223 |
Stephen B. Fox | 92 | 402 | 31414 |
David A. Reardon | 92 | 576 | 37868 |
Paul D. Griffiths | 89 | 721 | 29254 |