Search
Skip to Search Results- 231Department of Public Health Sciences
- 72Department of Medical Sciences
- 1Department of Agricultural, Food and Nutritional Science
- 1Department of Agricultural, Food, and Nutritional Science
- 1Department of Economics
- 1Department of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences
- 2Elamy, Abdel-Halim H
- 2Wang, Jian
- 1Adams, Denise
- 1Al Sayah, Fatima
- 1Al-Ahmadi, Somaia
- 1Alam, Shomoita
- 6Yasui, Yutaka (Public Health Sciences)
- 4Senthilselvan, Ambikaipakan (Public Health Sciences)
- 3Dinu, Irina (Department of Public Health Sciences)
- 3Senthilselvan, Ambikaipakan (Department of Public Health Sciences)
- 2Beach, Jeremy (Department of Medicine)
- 2Davis, Faith (School of Public Health)
-
Fall 2014
Evidence surrounding the role of multimorbidity in an acute care setting, as well as factors associated with improved health outcomes in this patient population, is significantly lacking. Therefore, the objectives of this program of research were to determine the role of multimorbidity on short...
-
Spring 2018
In patients undergoing elective major surgery, preoperative anemia is a common morbidity that may necessitate allogeneic blood transfusion in a substantial proportion of patients depending on the degree of anemia. Allogeneic blood transfusion has potential adverse outcomes. Preoperative...
-
Sleep and sleep disordered breathing in the first year of life: a Canadian birth cohort study
DownloadFall 2014
Inadequate childhood sleep may adversely affect neurodevelopment, behaviour, and metabolic function. Few population-based studies have examined sleep duration and sleep disordered breathing (SDB) within the first year of life. Families in the Edmonton site of the Canadian Healthy Infant...
-
Fall 2011
Timely, accurate predictions of potential influenza epidemics are essential for healthcare providers and policy makers as the epidemics can result in heavy demands for health services. Current statistical modeling of surveillance data has limited prediction abilities and often fails to respond...