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Dianna M Smith

Explore the profile of Dianna M Smith including associated specialties, affiliations and a list of published articles. Areas
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Articles 8
Citations 153
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Recent Articles
1.
Smith D, Rixson L, Grove G, Ziauddeen N, Vassilev I, Taheem R, et al.
PLoS One . 2022 Dec; 17(12):e0267260. PMID: 36490256
Background: In England, the responsibility to address food insecurity lies with local government, yet the prevalence of this social inequality is unknown in small subnational areas. In 2018 an index...
2.
Smith D, Vogel C, Campbell M, Alwan N, Moon G
PLoS One . 2021 Jun; 16(6):e0252877. PMID: 34161358
Background: Small-area estimation models are regularly commissioned by public health bodies to identify areas of greater inequality and target areas for intervention in a range of behaviours and outcomes. Such...
3.
Humphreys D, Smith D
Health Place . 2013 Oct; 24:110-4. PMID: 24077334
Alcohol-related harm is related to alcohol availability. Due to complex regulatory and environmental factors, alcohol availability varies spatially. However, the extent of this variation is largely unknown in the UK,...
4.
Greaves F, Pape U, Lee H, Smith D, Darzi A, Majeed A, et al.
J Med Internet Res . 2012 Oct; 14(5):e146. PMID: 23076301
Background: Patients are increasingly rating their family physicians on the Internet in the same way as they might rate a hotel on TripAdvisor or a seller on eBay, despite physicians'...
5.
Riva M, Smith D
Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol . 2011 Jun; 47(5):745-55. PMID: 21626058
Purpose: Public mental health surveillance data are rarely available at a fine geographic scale. This study applies a spatial microsimulation procedure to generate small-area (lower super outputs areas [LSOA]) estimates...
6.
Smith D, Pearce J, Harland K
Health Place . 2011 Jan; 17(2):618-24. PMID: 21257335
Models created to estimate neighbourhood level health outcomes and behaviours can be difficult to validate as prevalence is often unknown at the local level. This paper tests the reliability of...
7.
Smith D, Cummins S, Taylor M, Dawson J, Marshall D, Sparks L, et al.
Int J Epidemiol . 2009 Jun; 39(1):277-84. PMID: 19491142
Background: The 'deprivation amplification' hypothesis suggests that residents of deprived neighbourhoods have universally poorer access to high-quality food environments, which in turn contributes to the development of spatial inequalities in...
8.
Cummins S, Smith D, Taylor M, Dawson J, Marshall D, Sparks L, et al.
Public Health Nutr . 2009 Feb; 12(11):2044-50. PMID: 19243676
Objective: Neighbourhood differences in access to fresh fruit and vegetables may explain social inequalities in diet. Investigations have focused on variations in cost and availability as barriers to the purchase...