Tianfeng He
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
23 Papers
85 Citations
Tianfeng He is an academic researcher from Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Health literacy. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 18 publications. Previous affiliations of Tianfeng He include Peking University.
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Papers
The short term burden of ambient fine particulate matter on chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in Ningbo, China.
Guoxing Li,Jing Huang,Guozhang Xu,Xiaochuan Pan,Xujun Qian,Jiaying Xu,Yan Zhao,Tao Zhang,Qichen Liu,Xinbiao Guo,Tianfeng He +10 more
TL;DR: The effects of PM2.5 on YLL due to COPD showed a non-linear pattern, with relatively steep at low levels and flattened out at higher exposures, and were significantly higher in the elderly than those in the younger.
A case–control study of risk factors for severe hand–foot–mouth disease among children in Ningbo, China, 2010–2011
TL;DR: Clinicians should pay increased attention to children diagnosed as HFMD with the independent risk factors above, and an increased risk of severity was significantly associated with the presence of, e.g., a high fever of over 39°C for more than 3 days.
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Prevalence and genotype distribution of HPV infection among women in Ningbo, China
TL;DR: To evaluate HPV prevalence and genotype distribution among women in Ningbo, China, a large number of women have screened for HPV and the results show clear patterns of infection and disease progression.
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Temporal variation in associations between temperature and years of life lost in a southern China city with typical subtropical climate.
Guoxing Li,Jing Huang,Guozhang Xu,Xiaochuan Pan,Xujun Qian,Jiaying Xu,Yan Zhao,Tao Zhang,Qichen Liu,Xinbiao Guo,Tianfeng He +10 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explored temporal variation in the associations between temperature and YLL before and after 2013 heat waves (period I: Jan 2008 to Sep 2013, period II: Oct 2013 to Dec 2015) in Ningbo, a southern China city with typical subtropical climate.
Associations of residential green space with incident type 2 diabetes and the role of air pollution: A prospective analysis in UK Biobank.
TL;DR: Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper evaluated the longitudinal association between residential green space and incident type 2 diabetes, and further illustrate the role of air pollution in a prospective analysis in UK Biobank.
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