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Showing 1–7 of 7 results
Advanced filters: Author: Brianna Abbott Clear advanced filters
  • Multimodal data from 347 deeply phenotyped individuals including healthy, prediabetic individuals and individuals with T2D report remotely acquired patterns of glucose control via continuous glucose monitoring, and correlates them with diet and microbiome features and physiological signals, showing that these are able to discriminate individuals with T2D from control also in a large independent cohort.

    • Mattia Carletti
    • Jay Pandit
    • Giorgio Quer
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Medicine
    Volume: 31, P: 3121-3127
  • From the cancellation of a massive alcohol study to the dissolution of Theranos, 2018 was a year fraught with shutdowns. But amid all the shake-ups, the year also saw a few firsts, including approval of an artificial intelligence–based medical platform that helps clinicians diagnose strokes.

    • Brianna Abbott
    News & Views
    Nature Medicine
    Volume: 24, P: 1783-1784
  • Machine learning makes new sense of psychiatric symptoms

    • Brianna Abbott
    News
    Nature Medicine
    Volume: 25, P: 9-11
  • Cancer registries that track tumors as they spread could reveal how these growths metastasize

    • Brianna Abbott
    News
    Nature Medicine
    Volume: 25, P: 352-355
  • Oral disease is a direct reflection of societal disadvantage and is arguably a more visible representation of one’s social position than any other trait. The disparities in oral health outcomes established by colonisation are perpetuated and widened by neoliberalism in Australia operate through insidious pathways of social marginalisation. Australia’s fractured dental health system focused on privatisation, decreased social welfare, and individual responsibility continues to inadequately meet the oral health needs of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples. Poor oral health in Australia is not restricted to those experiencing ‘poverty’ as understood within a dichotomous paradigm but also by the working poor. Exploring the ways in which neoliberalism has contributed to the establishment of Australia’s working poor, as exemplified by the case of Aboriginal Health Workers/Practitioners, allows us to widen our understanding of how neoliberal austerity and individualism is affecting the oral health of low-wage workers. We are compelled to critically examine how structural forces maintain power imbalances and health inequities to progress beyond an individualistic narrative and explore alternative pathways to oral health sovereignty for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples.

    • Brianna Poirier
    • Gustavo Soares
    • Lisa Jamieson
    Comments & OpinionOpen Access
    Humanities and Social Sciences Communications
    Volume: 12, P: 1-7