Danping Liu
National Institutes of Health
79 Papers
153 Citations
Danping Liu is an academic researcher from National Institutes of Health. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Population. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 71 publications. Previous affiliations of Danping Liu include University of Washington.
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Papers
Preconception and early pregnancy air pollution exposures and risk of gestational diabetes mellitus.
Candace Robledo,Pauline Mendola,Edwina Yeung,Tuija Männistö,Rajeshwari Sundaram,Danping Liu,Qi Ying,Seth Sherman,Katherine L. Grantz +8 more
TL;DR: Maternal exposures to NOx and SO2 preconception and during the first few weeks of pregnancy were associated with increased GDM risk and risk estimates remained elevated for first trimester exposure.
175
Joint Effects of Structural Racism and Income Inequality on Small-for-Gestational-Age Birth
TL;DR: High levels of racial inequality and socioeconomic inequality appear to increase the risk of SGA birth, particularly when they co-occur, and similar effects were observed for both races.
133
Fetal growth standards: the NICHD fetal growth study approach in context with INTERGROWTH-21st and the World Health Organization Multicentre Growth Reference Study.
TL;DR: This expert review compares and contrasts the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Fetal Growth Studies, INTERGROWTH‐21st and World Health Organization Multicentre Growth Reference Study conclusions in light of differences in aims, sampling frames, and analytical approaches.
133
Ambient Temperature and Early Delivery of Singleton Pregnancies
TL;DR: Exposure to hot or cold during weeks 1–7 increased risk for early preterm and late preterm pregnancies, and both acute and chronic ambient temperature extremes may affect early delivery risk.
Ambient temperature and air quality in relation to small for gestational age and term low birthweight.
TL;DR: Prenatal exposures to extreme ambient temperature relative to usual environment may increase term low birthweight (tLBW) risk, and concerns related to climate change merit further investigation.
109