John Broughton
University of Otago
43 Papers
234 Citations
John Broughton is an academic researcher from University of Otago. The author has contributed to research in topics: Poison control & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 15, co-authored 43 publications.
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Papers
Reducing Indigenous Oral Health Inequalities: A Review from 5 Nations:
Tamanna Tiwari,Lisa Jamieson,John Broughton,Herenia P. Lawrence,Terrence S. Batliner,Rui Arantes,Judith Albino +6 more
TL;DR: Recommendations for future work in reducing oral health disparities include addressing social determinants of health in various Indigenous populations, training future generations of dental providers in cultural competency, and making Indigenous communities true partners in research.
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The oral health of Indigenous children: A review of four nations
Eleanor J Parker,Lisa Jamieson,John Broughton,Judith Albino,Herenia P. Lawrence,Kaye F. Roberts-Thomson +5 more
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that significant oral health inequalities exist in each nation and the success of specific preventive programmes is encouraging; these approaches should be further evaluated and implemented as part of broader health promotion programmes for Indigenous children and families in order to decrease current oral health disparities.
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Dental Disease Outcomes Following a 2-Year Oral Health Promotion Program for Australian Aboriginal Children and Their Families: A 2-Arm Parallel, Single-blind, Randomised Controlled Trial.
Lisa Jamieson,Lisa G. Smithers,Joanne Hedges,Eleanor J Parker,Helen Mills,Kostas Kapellas,Herenia P. Lawrence,John Broughton,Xiangqun Ju +8 more
TL;DR: A culturally-appropriate intervention at four time-points from pregnancy through to 18-months resulted in improvements in the oral health of Aboriginal children.
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Racism and Oral Health Outcomes among Pregnant Canadian Aboriginal Women
Herenia P. Lawrence,Jaime Cidro,Sonia Isaac-Mann,Sabrina Peressini,Marion Maar,Robert J Schroth,Janet N Gordon,Laurie Hoffman-Goetz,John Broughton,Lisa Jamieson +9 more
TL;DR: In the context of dental care, racism experienced by Aboriginal women can be a barrier to accessing services and programs and policies should address racism's insidious effects on both mothers’ and children’s oral health outcomes.
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The mortality and cancer experience of New Zealand Vietnam war veterans: a cohort study.
TL;DR: The pattern of mortality and cancer incidence observed in New Zealand Vietnam veterans is not at odds with the list of compensable conditions and consistent with that found in Australian veterans serving in the same area of Vietnam, but also consistent with smoking and the healthy soldier effect.
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