Steven N. Blair
University of South Carolina
892 Papers
6.9K Citations
Steven N. Blair is an academic researcher from University of South Carolina. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Physical fitness. The author has an hindex of 165, co-authored 879 publications. Previous affiliations of Steven N. Blair include Stanford University & University of Western Australia.
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Papers
•Journal Article
AHA Consensus Panel Statement: Preventing Heart Attack and Death in Patients With Coronary Disease
Sidney C. Smith,Steven N. Blair,Michael Criqui,Gerald F. Fletcher,Valentin Fuster,Bernard J. Gersh,Antonio M. Gotto,K. Lance Gould,Philip Greenland,Scott M. Grundy,Martha N. Hill,Mark A. Hlatky,Nancy Houston-Miller,Ronald M. Krauss,John C. LaRosa,Ira S. Ockene,Suzanne Oparil,Thomas A. Pearson,Elliot Rapaport,Rodman D. Starke +19 more
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A Systematic Review of Fitness Apps and Their Potential Clinical and Sports Utility for Objective and Remote Assessment of Cardiorespiratory Fitness
Adrià Muntaner-Mas,Antonio Martinez-Nicolas,Carl J. Lavie,Steven N. Blair,Robert Ross,Ross Arena,Francisco B. Ortega,Francisco B. Ortega +7 more
TL;DR: This systematic review systematically reviewed the scientific literature and identified evidence-based practical recommendations that apps might potentially offer to objectively and remotely assess CRF as a complementary tool to traditional methods in the clinical and sports settings.
When will we treat physical activity as a legitimate medical therapy…even though it does not come in a pill?
TL;DR: A recent highly publicised report claimed that an exercise pill has been discovered and this may be the end of the need to get off the couch and soon all the benefits of exercise will be delivered by a pill.
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2014 Consensus Statement from the first Economics of Physical Inactivity Consensus (EPIC) Conference (Vancouver)
Jennifer C. Davis,Evert Verhagen,Stirling Bryan,Teresa Liu-Ambrose,Jeff Borland,David M. Buchner,Marike R C Hendriks,Marike R C Hendriks,Richard Weiler,James R. Morrow,Willem van Mechelen,Steven N. Blair,Mike Pratt,Johann Windt,Hashel al-Tunaiji,Erin M Macri,Karim M. Khan,Karim M. Khan +17 more
TL;DR: It is proposed that guidelines specific for economic evaluations of physical inactivity intervention studies are developed to ensure that related costs and effects are robustly, consistently and accurately measured.
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A Prospective Study of Fitness, Fatness, and Depressive Symptoms
TL;DR: Results from the present study suggest that low fitness is more strongly associated with the onset of elevated depressive symptoms than is fatness, regardless of the measure of fatness used.