F. Lucy Wright
University of Oxford
4 Papers
F. Lucy Wright is an academic researcher from University of Oxford. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Epidemiology. The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 4 publications.
Chat about Author
Papers
Epidemiology of cardiovascular disease in Europe
Nick Townsend,Denis Kazakiewicz,F. Lucy Wright,Adam Timmis,Adam Timmis,Radu Huculeci,Aleksandra Torbica,Chris P Gale,Stephan Achenbach,Franz Weidinger,Panos Vardas +10 more
TL;DR: Townsend et al. as discussed by the authors described the epidemiology of cardiovascular disease across the WHO European Region and call for improved surveillance and monitoring to inform the development and implementation of evidence-based preventive and treatment approaches.
458
The impact of physical activity and an additional behavioural risk factor on cardiovascular disease, cancer and all-cause mortality: a systematic review.
TL;DR: Those participants who reported being physically active combined with achieving other health behaviour goals compared to those who were categorised as physically inactive were at least half as likely to experience an incident cardiovascular disease (CVD) event, die from CVD, or die from any cause.
B‐type natriuretic peptide‐guided treatment for heart failure
Julie McLellan,Carl Heneghan,Rafael Perera,A Clements,Paul Glasziou,Karen Kearley,Nicola Pidduck,Nia Roberts,S Tyndel,F. Lucy Wright,Clare Bankhead +10 more
TL;DR: Assessment of whether treatment guided by serial BNP or NT‐proBNP monitoring improves outcomes compared with treatmentguided by clinical assessment alone found this could optimise drug management in heart failure patients whilst allaying concerns over potential side effects due to drug intolerance.
Long-term trends in population-based hospitalisation rates for myocardial infarction in England: a national database study of 3.5 million admissions, 1968-2016.
F. Lucy Wright,Nick Townsend,Melanie Greenland,Michael J Goldacre,Kate Smolina,Ben Lacey,Lee Nedkoff +6 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyzed the timing and scale of temporal changes in rates of hospitalised myocardial infarction (MI) in England by age and sex from 1968 to 2016.
3