Mark Woodward
The George Institute for Global Health
957 Papers
5.6K Citations
Mark Woodward is an academic researcher from The George Institute for Global Health. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Population. The author has an hindex of 133, co-authored 870 publications. Previous affiliations of Mark Woodward include New York University & University of Sydney.
Chat about Author
Papers
Do smoking habits differ between women and men in contemporary Western populations? Evidence from half a million people in the UK Biobank study
TL;DR: Differences in smoking behaviour between women and men have decreased over time, and past differentials are unlikely to explain the increased susceptibility to smoking-related chronic disease in women compared with men that has previously been observed.
113
Changes in Quality of Life Associated with Complications of Diabetes: Results from the ADVANCE Study
Alison J. Hayes,Hisatomi Arima,Mark Woodward,John Chalmers,Neil R Poulter,Pavel Hamet,Philip Clarke +6 more
TL;DR: In this article, the impact of complications on summary measures of health-related quality of life among people with type 2 diabetes was measured using EQ-5D-3L utility score.
112
Prediction models for preeclampsia: A systematic review.
Annelien C. De Kat,Annelien C. De Kat,Jane E. Hirst,Mark Woodward,Stephen Kennedy,Sanne A.E. Peters +5 more
TL;DR: Before multivariable preeclampsia prediction can be clinically implemented universally, further validation and calibration of well-performing prediction models is needed.
111
Clinical Prediction Algorithm (BRAIN) to Determine Risk of Hematoma Growth in Acute Intracerebral Hemorrhage
Xia Wang,Xia Wang,Hisatomi Arima,Hisatomi Arima,Rustam Al-Shahi Salman,Mark Woodward,Emma Heeley,Emma Heeley,Christian Stapf,Pablo M. Lavados,Pablo M. Lavados,Thompson G. Robinson,Yining Huang,Ji-Guang Wang,Candice Delcourt,Candice Delcourt,Craig S. Anderson,Craig S. Anderson +17 more
TL;DR: A simple algorithm to predict the risk of hematoma growth in acute spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) to better inform clinicians and researchers in their efforts to improve outcomes for patients is developed and validated.
111
Body-mass index and risk of advanced chronic kidney disease: Prospective analyses from a primary care cohort of 1.4 million adults in England
William G. Herrington,William G. Herrington,Margaret Smith,Clare Bankhead,Kunihiro Matsushita,Sarah Stevens,Tim Holt,FD Richard Hobbs,Josef Coresh,Mark Woodward,Mark Woodward +10 more
TL;DR: Direct evidence is provided that being overweight increases risk of advanced CKD, that being obese substantially increases such risk, and that this remains true for those with and without diabetes, hypertension or cardiovascular disease.