Yeyi Zhu
Kaiser Permanente
126 Papers
85 Citations
Yeyi Zhu is an academic researcher from Kaiser Permanente. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Gestational diabetes. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 78 publications. Previous affiliations of Yeyi Zhu include National Institutes of Health & University of Texas at Austin.
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Papers
Prevalence of Gestational Diabetes and Risk of Progression to Type 2 Diabetes: a Global Perspective.
Yeyi Zhu,Cuilin Zhang +1 more
TL;DR: This work comprehensively reviewed available data in the past decade in an attempt to estimate the contemporary global prevalence of gestational diabetes mellitus by country and region and the risk of progression from GDM to T2DM.
A longitudinal study of depression and gestational diabetes in pregnancy and the postpartum period.
Stefanie N. Hinkle,Germaine M. Buck Louis,Shristi Rawal,Yeyi Zhu,Paul S. Albert,Cuilin Zhang +5 more
TL;DR: This prospective study demonstrates a modest association between depressive symptoms early in pregnancy and an increased risk of incident GDM, as well as between GDM and subsequent postpartum depression risk, highlighting pregnancy and the post partum period as an important susceptible time window during the life course for the interplay between depression and glucose intolerance phenotypes.
Racial/Ethnic Disparities in the Prevalence of Diabetes and Prediabetes by BMI: Patient Outcomes Research To Advance Learning (PORTAL) Multisite Cohort of Adults in the U.S.
Yeyi Zhu,Margo A. Sidell,David Arterburn,Matthew F. Daley,Jay Desai,Stephanie L. Fitzpatrick,Michael A. Horberg,Corinna Koebnick,Emily V. McCormick,Caryn Oshiro,Deborah R. Young,Assiamira Ferrara +11 more
TL;DR: Racial/ethnic minorities had a higher burden of diabetes and prediabetes at lower BMIs than whites, suggesting the role of factors other than obesity in racial/ethnic disparities in diabetes andprediabetes risk and highlighting the need for tailored screening and prevention strategies.
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Ambient Temperature and Early Delivery of Singleton Pregnancies
TL;DR: Exposure to hot or cold during weeks 1–7 increased risk for early preterm and late preterm pregnancies, and both acute and chronic ambient temperature extremes may affect early delivery risk.
Ambient temperature and air quality in relation to small for gestational age and term low birthweight.
TL;DR: Prenatal exposures to extreme ambient temperature relative to usual environment may increase term low birthweight (tLBW) risk, and concerns related to climate change merit further investigation.
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