TienYu Owen Yang
University of Oxford
30 Papers
126 Citations
TienYu Owen Yang is an academic researcher from University of Oxford. The author has contributed to research in topics: Relative risk & Cancer. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 25 publications. Previous affiliations of TienYu Owen Yang include Buckinghamshire Healthcare NHS Trust & Cancer Epidemiology Unit.
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Papers
Endometrial cancer and oral contraceptives: an individual participant meta-analysis of 27 276 women with endometrial cancer from 36 epidemiological studies
Naomi E. Allen,Richard Peto,Valerie Beral,S.W. Kan,G Reeves,S Sweetland,Richard Stevens,TienYu Owen Yang,P.A. van den Brandt,Leo J. Schouten +9 more
TL;DR: These results suggest that, in developed countries, about 400 000 cases of endometrial cancer before the age of 75 years have been prevented over the past 50 years by oral contraceptives, including 200 000 in the past decade.
Cohort Profile: the Million Women Study.
Jane Green,Gillian K Reeves,Sarah Floud,Isobel Barnes,Benjamin J Cairns,T Gathani,Kirstin Pirie,S Sweetland,TienYu Owen Yang,Valerie Beral +9 more
TL;DR: The Million Women Study started recruiting participants over 20 years ago, in 1996, to obtain robust prospective information on the risk of breast cancer associated with use of different types of menopausal hormone therapy (HT), and an equally important aim was to obtain reliable data on the effects of other potentially modifiable factors that affect women’s health as they age.
Tea and coffee and risk of endometrial cancer: cohort study and meta-analysis
TL;DR: The meta-analyses showed no significant association between endometrial cancer risk and tea consumption and a weak association for coffee consumption in prospective studies, but there may have been selective publication of only part of the evidence.
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Postmenopausal endometrial cancer risk and body size in early life and middle age: prospective cohort study
TL;DR: Among women who have never used hormone therapy for menopause, the association between body size in early life and endometrial cancer risk in postmenopausal women can be largely explained by women’s current BMI.
Parent support, peer support, and peer acceptance in healthy lifestyle for asthma management among early adolescents.
TL;DR: The findings of this study suggest recognizing the developmental change of social support during early adolescence may be important for asthma management in adolescents.
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