3.8 Article

Factors associated with deaths due to COVID-19 versus other causes: population-based cohort analysis of UK primary care data and linked national death registrations within the OpenSAFELY platform

Related references

Note: Only part of the references are listed.
Article Infectious Diseases

Non-communicable disease, sociodemographic factors, and risk of death from infection: a UK Biobank observational cohort study

Michael Drozd et al.

Summary: Various factors including age, gender, smoking, socioeconomic deprivation, and a range of NCDs may increase the risk of infection-related death. Further research is needed to understand why these risk factors are more strongly linked to infection death.

LANCET INFECTIOUS DISEASES (2021)

Article Medicine, General & Internal

Ethnic differences in SARS-CoV-2 infection and COVID-19-related hospitalisation, intensive care unit admission, and death in 17 million adults in England: an observational cohort study using the OpenSAFELY platform

Rohini Mathur et al.

Summary: The study found that some minority ethnic populations in England have higher risks of testing positive for SARS-CoV-2 and experiencing adverse COVID-19 outcomes compared to the White population, even after adjusting for sociodemographic, clinical, and household characteristics.

LANCET (2021)

Editorial Material Public, Environmental & Occupational Health

Assessment of workers' personal vulnerability to covid-19 using 'covid-age'

David Coggon et al.

OCCUPATIONAL MEDICINE-OXFORD (2020)

Editorial Material Medicine, General & Internal

Use of normal risk to improve understanding of dangers of covid-19

David Spiegelhalter

BMJ-BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL (2020)

Article Public, Environmental & Occupational Health

Comparison of Sociodemographic and Health-Related Characteristics of UK Biobank Participants With Those of the General Population

Anna Fry et al.

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY (2017)

Article Public, Environmental & Occupational Health

What is the difference between missing completely at random and missing at random?

Krishnan Bhaskaran et al.

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY (2014)

Article Public, Environmental & Occupational Health

Completeness and usability of ethnicity data in UK-based primary care and hospital databases

Rohini Mathur et al.

JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH (2014)

Article Pharmacology & Pharmacy

Validation and validity of diagnoses in the General Practice Research Database: a systematic review

Emily Herrett et al.

BRITISH JOURNAL OF CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY (2010)