F
Fakhrul Islam
Researcher at University of New South Wales
Publications - 10
Citations - 577
Fakhrul Islam is an academic researcher from University of New South Wales. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mental health & Population. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 8 publications receiving 489 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Relative risk of cardiovascular disease among people living with HIV: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
TL;DR: The aim of this study was to estimate the relative risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD) among people living with HIV (PLHIV) compared with the HIV‐uninfected population.
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Relative risk of renal disease among people living with HIV: a systematic review and meta-analysis
TL;DR: PLHIV are at increased risk of renal disease, with greater risk at later stages of infection and at older ages, however, less reduction in renal disease risk occurs for Tenofovir-containing ART than for other regimens.
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Cohort Profile: The New South Wales Child Development Study (NSW-CDS)-Wave 2 (child age 13 years).
Melissa J. Green,Melissa J. Green,Felicity Harris,Kristin R. Laurens,Kristin R. Laurens,Maina Kariuki,Stacy Tzoumakis,Kimberlie Dean,Fakhrul Islam,Larissa Rossen,Tyson Whitten,Maxwell Smith,Allyson Holbrook,Miles Bore,Sally Brinkman,Sally Brinkman,Sally Brinkman,Marilyn Chilvers,Titia Sprague,Robert Stevens,Vaughan J. Carr,Vaughan J. Carr,Vaughan J. Carr +22 more
TL;DR: The New South Wales Child Development Study (NSW-CDS) as discussed by the authors was established to enable a life course epidemiological approach to identify risk and protective factors for childhood and adolescent-onset mental health problems, and other adverse outcomes (e.g. educational underachievement, welfare dependence, criminality).
Journal ArticleDOI
Association of processes of primary care and hospitalisation for people with diabetes: A record linkage study.
Elizabeth J Comino,Fakhrul Islam,Duong Thuy Tran,Louisa Jorm,Jeff R. Flack,Jeff R. Flack,Bin Jalaludin,Marion Haas,Mark Harris +8 more
TL;DR: This study has implications for hospital avoidance programmes suggesting that strengthening primary care may be more important than care coordination for this group of patients.
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Preventive care in general practice among healthy older New South Wales residents
TL;DR: There was evidence for inverse care for rural participants and smokers, who despite being at higher risk of health problems, were less likely to report receiving preventive care, and the need for greater effort to promote preventive care for these groups in Australian general practice.