个人简介
Professor Paul Roderick qualified in Medicine from Cambridge and London Universities, and initially pursued postgraduate training in clinical medicine. He then undertook public health training in the North West Thames Region London, combining service with academic training at the MRC Epidemiology and Medical Care Unit. He has been a public health academic at the University of Southampton since 1993, and was promoted to a personal chair of Public Health in 2007.
He has diverse research interests embracing clinical epidemiology, health services research and public health. He has over 200 peer reviewed publications, has supervised to completion 15 PhDs/MDs and has substantial grant income from a wide variety of sources including NIHR and KRUK.
A longstanding research focus has been on chronic kidney disease (CKD) where his research has addressed the epidemiology of CKD including its prevalence and prognosis in older people, and the effectiveness and equity of renal replacement therapy. He has been a member of the NICE Guidelines Committee for chronic kidney disease, and is a member of the international CKD Prognosis Consortium. Current interests include the impact of acute kidney injury (AKI) and evaluation of AKI prevention strategies, and the challenge of multimorbidity.
Other research has focused on the epidemiology of chronic liver disease, preventing alcohol related harm, health inequalities and school based health promotion.
He led the Academic Unit of Primary Care and Population Sciences, one of the four research units in the Faculty of Medicine from 2010 until 2015. He co-directs a cross University Population Health Strategic Research (USRG) group. He is a member of the Steering Group of the NIHR Wessex CLARHC.
He has been very active in undergraduate, postgraduate and professional public health training. He has been external examiner to several MScs in Public Health.
研究领域
His research on chronic kidney disease is highly relevant to developing equitable and effective kidney disease services. He has shown that there are no social inequalities in the outcomes of dialysis but that there is an inverse socio-economic gradient of CKD; that reduced kidney function is of clinical significance in older people (a study contributing to recent meta-analyses published in the Lancet and JAMA by the CKD Prognosis Collaboration); and survival on dialysis is better in ethnic minorities. Recent research includes studies on the prevalence and determinants of CKD using Health Surveys for England, practice patterns for conservative kidney management as an alternative to dialysis (NIHR funded), equity of access to the kidney transplant waiting list (NIHR funded), detection and prevention of AKI (Wessex CLAHRC, member national Think Kidneys Risk workstream) and multimorbidity in CKD.
近期论文
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Pneumococcal conjugate vaccine implementation in middle-income countries - Tricarico, Serena, McNeil, Hannah C., Cleary, David W., Head, Michael G., Lim , Victor, Kok Seng Yap, Ivan, Chun Wie, Chong, Siang Tan, Cheng, Norazmi, Mohd Nor, Ismail, Aziah, Seong Guan Cheah, Eddy, Faust, Saul N., Jefferies, Johanna M.C., Roderick, Paul J., Moore, Michael, Yuen, Ho Ming, Newell, Marie-Louise, Mcgrath, Nuala, Webb, Jeremy, Doncaster, C. Patrick, Kraaijeveld, Alex R., Webb, Jeremy S. and Clarke, Stuart C. Published:2016Publication:PneumoniaPage Range:1-26
Experiences of long-term life-limiting conditions among patients and carers: what can we learn from a meta-review of systematic reviews of qualitative studies of chronic heart failure, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and chronic kidney disease? - May, Carl R., Cummings, Amanda, Myall, Michelle, Harvey, Jonathan, Pope, Catherine, Griffiths, Peter, Roderick, Paul, Arber, Mick, Boehmer, Kasey, Mair, Frances S and Richardson, Alison Published:2016Publication:BMJ OpenVolume:6, (e011694)Page Range:1-16doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2016-011694
Initial teacher training to promote health and well?being inschools – a systematic review of effectiveness and barriers and facilitators - Shepherd, J., Pickett, K., Dewhirst, S., Byrne, J., Speller, V., Grace, M., Almond, P. and Roderick, P. Published:2016Publication:Health Education JournalVolume:75, (6)Page Range:721-735doi:10.1177/0017896915614333
Treatment of end stage kidney failure without renal replacement therapy - Hole, Barnaby, Tonkin-Crine, Sarah, Caskey, Fergus J. and Roderick, Paul Published:2016Publication:Seminars in DialysisVolume:29, (6)Page Range:491-506doi:10.1111/SDI.12535
Is timing of the first antenatal visit associated with adverse birth outcomes? Analysis from a population-based birth cohort - Alwan, Nisreen A., Roderick, Paul J. and Macklon, Nick S. Published:2016Publication:The Lancet