Zoë Davis
University of British Columbia
3 Papers
9 Citations
Zoë Davis is an academic researcher from University of British Columbia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Mental health. The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 3 publications.
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Papers
Assessing the association between lifetime exposure to greenspace and early childhood development and the mediation effects of air pollution and noise in Canada: a population-based birth cohort study.
Ingrid Jarvis,Zoë Davis,Hind Sbihi,Michael Brauer,Agatha Czekajlo,Hugh W. Davies,Sarah E. Gergel,Martin Guhn,Michael Jerrett,Mieke Koehoorn,Tim F. Oberlander,Jason Su,Matilda van den Bosch +12 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the relationship between lifetime residential exposure to greenspace and early childhood development and evaluated the extent to which this association is mediated by reductions in traffic-related air pollution and noise.
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Born to be Wise: a population registry data linkage protocol to assess the impact of modifiable early-life environmental exposures on the health and development of children.
Matilda van den Bosch,Michael Brauer,Rick Burnett,Hugh W. Davies,Zoë Davis,Martin Guhn,Ingrid Jarvis,Lorien Nesbitt,Tim F. Oberlander,Emily J. Rugel,Hind Sbihi,Jason Su,Michael Jerrett +12 more
TL;DR: This project will analyse the impact of various modifiable early life environmental exposures on different dimensions of childhood development, including variability depending on cumulative exposure by assigning time-weighted exposure estimates and by studying subsamples who have changed residence and exposure.
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The association between natural environments and childhood mental health and development: A systematic review and assessment of different exposure measurements.
Zoë Davis,Martin Guhn,Ingrid Jarvis,Michael Jerrett,Lorien Nesbitt,Tim F. Oberlander,Hind Sbihi,Jason Su,Matilda van den Bosch +8 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors identify the most common NE metrics used in childhood mental health and development research and identify the metrics that are most consistently associated with health and assess the relative strength of association depending on type of NE exposure measurement, in terms of metric used (i.e., measurement technique, such as remote sensing), but also rate (e.g., spatial and temporal exposure).
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