Juliette S. Kendrick
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
53 Papers
859 Citations
Juliette S. Kendrick is an academic researcher from Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pregnancy & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 32, co-authored 53 publications. Previous affiliations of Juliette S. Kendrick include Emory University & University of Rochester.
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Papers
Physical activity and the incidence of coronary heart disease
TL;DR: These observations suggest that in CHD prevention programs, regular physical activity should be promoted as vigorously as blood pressure control, dietary modification to lower serum cholesterol, and smoking cessation.
1.6K
The box plot: a simple visual method to interpret data
TL;DR: The box plot is applied to tabular data from two recently published articles to show how readers can use box plots to improve the interpretation of data in complex tables and recommend that the box plot be used more frequently.
685
Predicting Lower-Extremity Injuries Among Habitual Runners
Caroline A. Macera,Russell R. Pate,Kenneth E. Powell,Kirby L. Jackson,Juliette S. Kendrick,Timothy E. Craven +5 more
TL;DR: The results suggest that the incidence of lower-extremity injuries is high for habitual runners, and that for those new to running or those who have been previously injured, reducing weekly distance is a reasonable preventive behavior.
405
Unintended pregnancy among adult women exposed to abuse or household dysfunction during their childhood.
Patricia M. Dietz,Alison M. Spitz,Robert F. Anda,David F. Williamson,Pamela M. McMahon,John S. Santelli,Dale Nordenberg,Vincent J. Felitti,Juliette S. Kendrick +8 more
TL;DR: There may be a dose-response association between exposure to childhood abuse or household dysfunction and unintended first pregnancy in adulthood, and additional research is needed to fully understand the causal pathway of this association.
374
The Reduction in Risk of Ovarian Cancer Associated with Oral-Contraceptive Use
Nancy C. Lee,Phyllis A. Wingo,Marta Gwinn,George L. Rubin,Juliette S. Kendrick,Linda A. Webster,Howard W. Ory +6 more
TL;DR: A protective effect was seen in women who had used oral contraceptives for as little as three to six months, and it continued for 15 years after use ended, independent of the specific oral-contraceptive formulation and of the histologic type of epithelial ovarian cancer.
276