Adrian B. Bonner
University of Kent
22 Papers
124 Citations
Adrian B. Bonner is an academic researcher from University of Kent. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mental health & Population. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 22 publications. Previous affiliations of Adrian B. Bonner include University of Stirling.
Chat about Author
Papers
A longitudinal population-based study of factors in adolescence predicting homelessness in young adulthood
Marianne Bernadette van den Bree,Katherine Helen Shelton,Adrian B. Bonner,Sebastian Moss,Hollie Victoria Thomas,Pamela J. Taylor +5 more
TL;DR: Among a range of well-established risk factors, a troubled family background, school adjustment problems and experiences of victimization were found to be the strongest predictors of homelessness in a general population of young people.
124
A novel HPLC method for the concurrent analysis and quantitation of seven water-soluble vitamins in biological fluids (plasma and urine): a validation study and application.
TL;DR: An HPLC method was developed and validated for the concurrent detection and quantitation of seven water-soluble vitamins in biological matrices (plasma and urine) and peak identification in real samples was used.
Awareness of, and participation with, digital alcohol marketing, and the association with frequency of high episodic drinking among young adults
TL;DR: That digital marketing was more successful than traditional in reaching young adults, and had a stronger association with increased frequency of HED, highlights the dynamic nature of marketing communications and the need for further research to fully understand young people’s experience with digital marketing.
23
Chronic alcohol feeding and its influence on c-Fos and heat shock protein-70 gene expression in different brain regions of male and female rats.
Tatsuo Nakahara,Makoto Hirano,Hideyuki Uchimura,Sima Shirali,Colin R. Martin,Adrian B. Bonner,Victor R. Preedy +6 more
TL;DR: It is shown that chronic ethanol feeding has no demonstrable effect on c-Fos mRNA expression in the brain when using nutritionally complete liquid diet regimens with concomitant pair-feeding.
23
Awareness of, and participation with, user-created alcohol promotion, and the association with higher-risk drinking in young adults
TL;DR: The results suggest that young adults are aware of, and participating with, a cumulative range of user-created alcohol promotion, both within and beyond social media.