Meredith Anderson
Kaiser Permanente
33 Papers
114 Citations
Meredith Anderson is an academic researcher from Kaiser Permanente. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Population. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 29 publications. Previous affiliations of Meredith Anderson include California Department of Public Health & California Health and Human Services Agency.
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Papers
Risk of Autism and Increasing Maternal and Paternal Age in a Large North American Population
TL;DR: Maternal and paternal age effects were seen in subgroups defined by race/ethnicity and other covariates and were of greater magnitude among first-born compared with later-born children, and further studies are needed to help clarify the biologic mechanisms involved in the independent association of autism risk with increasing maternal and paternalAge.
Familial Recurrence of Autism Spectrum Disorder: Evaluating Genetic and Environmental Contributions
Neil Risch,Thomas J. Hoffmann,Meredith Anderson,Lisa A. Croen,Judith K. Grether,Gayle C. Windham +5 more
TL;DR: The results support genetic susceptibility in the familial recurrence of ASD along with factors related to timing of birth.
152
Cigarette smoking and effects on hormone function in premenopausal women.
TL;DR: In this article, a prospective study of women of reproductive age (n = 403) recruited from a large health maintenance organization, who collected urine daily during an average of three to four menstrual cycles was conducted.
150
Exposure to organochlorine compounds and effects on ovarian function.
TL;DR: A potential effect of DDE on ovarian function is indicated, which may influence other end points such as fertility, pregnancy, and reproductive cancers.
135
Association of in utero organochlorine pesticide exposure and fetal growth and length of gestation in an agricultural population
Laura Fenster,Brenda Eskenazi,Meredith Anderson,Asa Bradman,Alan Hubbard,K Harley,G Vargas,Dana B. Barr +7 more
TL;DR: It is found that decreased length of gestation with increasing levels of lipid-adjusted HCB does not seem to have had clinical implications for this population, given its relatively low rate of preterm delivery (6.5%).