From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Peter Elwood (born 1930) is professor of epidemiology who for more than two decades led the Medical Research Council's Epidemiological Unit in South Wales. In 1979 he initiated the Caerphilly Heart Disease Study.

Career

Elwood completed four house jobs and six months in general practice, before opting towards epidemiology and studying whether some lung diseases favoured Northern Irish flax workers. [1]

His work has included a 35 year study involving over 2,500 men, on the effects of aspirin on platelets and heart disease, carried out in Caerphilly, Wales. [2]

He showed that absorption of iron from iron salts added to bread was at "about 4 per cent" in women with low hemoglobin level, which was lower than the previously assumed amount of "about 30 per cent". [3] He showed that giving milk to vulnerable children at school was beneficial but was not re-implemented. [3]

Selected publications

  • Elwood, P.C. (1966). "Utilization of food iron--an epidemiologist's view". Nutritio et Dieta; European Review of Nutrition and Dietetics. 8 (3): 210–225. doi: 10.1159/000175143. ISSN  0550-4031. PMID  5333573.
  • Elwood, P. C.; Newton, D.; Eakins, J. D.; Brown, D. A. (October 1968). "Absorption of iron from bread". The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. 21 (10): 1162–1169. doi: 10.1093/ajcn/21.10.1162. ISSN  0002-9165. PMID  5686243.
  • Elwood, P.C.; Benjamin, I.T.; Fry, F.A.; Eakins, J.D.; Brown, D.A.; De Kock, P.C.; Shah, J.U. (October 1970). "Absorption of iron from chapatti made from wheat flour". The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. 23 (10): 1267–1271. doi: 10.1093/ajcn/23.10.1267. ISSN  0002-9165. PMID  5475656. (Co-author)
  • ELWOOD PC; COCHRANE AL; BENJAMIN IT; SEYS-PROSSER D (October 1964). "A Follow-Up Study of Workers from an Asbestos Factory". British Journal of Industrial Medicine. 21 (4): 304–307. doi: 10.1136/oem.21.4.304. ISSN  0007-1072. PMC  1038406. PMID  14253230. (Co-author)
  • Yarnell, J. W.; Baker, I. A.; Sweetnam, P. M.; Bainton, D.; O'Brien, J. R.; Whitehead, P. J.; Elwood, P. C. (March 1991). "Fibrinogen, viscosity, and white blood cell count are major risk factors for ischemic heart disease. The Caerphilly and Speedwell collaborative heart disease studies". Circulation. 83 (3): 836–844. doi: 10.1161/01.CIR.83.3.836. ISSN  0009-7322. PMID  1999035. (Co-author)
  • Elwood, P. (November 2006). "The first randomized trial of aspirin for heart attack and the advent of systematic overviews of trials". Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine. 99 (11): 586–588. doi: 10.1177/014107680609901121. ISSN  0141-0768. PMC  1633560. PMID  17082305.

References

  1. ^ Jeffreys, Diarmuid (2010). Aspirin: The Extraordinary Story of a Wonder Drug. Bloomsbury Publishing. pp. 151, 214. ISBN  978-1-4088-2042-1.
  2. ^ "Research Spotlight: Professor Peter Elwood". Gair Rhydd. 29 February 2016. Archived from the original on 1 September 2023. Retrieved 31 August 2023.
  3. ^ a b Elwood, Peter (2002). "1964–69 Iron deficiency anaemia studies". In Ness, A R.; Reynolds, L A.; Tansey, E M. (eds.). Population-based research in South Wales : The MRC Pneumoconiosis Research Unit and the MRC Epidemiology Unit (PDF). London: Wellcome Trust Centre for the History of Medicine at UCL. pp. 70–71. ISBN  978-085484-081-6.

Further reading


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Peter Elwood (born 1930) is professor of epidemiology who for more than two decades led the Medical Research Council's Epidemiological Unit in South Wales. In 1979 he initiated the Caerphilly Heart Disease Study.

Career

Elwood completed four house jobs and six months in general practice, before opting towards epidemiology and studying whether some lung diseases favoured Northern Irish flax workers. [1]

His work has included a 35 year study involving over 2,500 men, on the effects of aspirin on platelets and heart disease, carried out in Caerphilly, Wales. [2]

He showed that absorption of iron from iron salts added to bread was at "about 4 per cent" in women with low hemoglobin level, which was lower than the previously assumed amount of "about 30 per cent". [3] He showed that giving milk to vulnerable children at school was beneficial but was not re-implemented. [3]

Selected publications

  • Elwood, P.C. (1966). "Utilization of food iron--an epidemiologist's view". Nutritio et Dieta; European Review of Nutrition and Dietetics. 8 (3): 210–225. doi: 10.1159/000175143. ISSN  0550-4031. PMID  5333573.
  • Elwood, P. C.; Newton, D.; Eakins, J. D.; Brown, D. A. (October 1968). "Absorption of iron from bread". The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. 21 (10): 1162–1169. doi: 10.1093/ajcn/21.10.1162. ISSN  0002-9165. PMID  5686243.
  • Elwood, P.C.; Benjamin, I.T.; Fry, F.A.; Eakins, J.D.; Brown, D.A.; De Kock, P.C.; Shah, J.U. (October 1970). "Absorption of iron from chapatti made from wheat flour". The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. 23 (10): 1267–1271. doi: 10.1093/ajcn/23.10.1267. ISSN  0002-9165. PMID  5475656. (Co-author)
  • ELWOOD PC; COCHRANE AL; BENJAMIN IT; SEYS-PROSSER D (October 1964). "A Follow-Up Study of Workers from an Asbestos Factory". British Journal of Industrial Medicine. 21 (4): 304–307. doi: 10.1136/oem.21.4.304. ISSN  0007-1072. PMC  1038406. PMID  14253230. (Co-author)
  • Yarnell, J. W.; Baker, I. A.; Sweetnam, P. M.; Bainton, D.; O'Brien, J. R.; Whitehead, P. J.; Elwood, P. C. (March 1991). "Fibrinogen, viscosity, and white blood cell count are major risk factors for ischemic heart disease. The Caerphilly and Speedwell collaborative heart disease studies". Circulation. 83 (3): 836–844. doi: 10.1161/01.CIR.83.3.836. ISSN  0009-7322. PMID  1999035. (Co-author)
  • Elwood, P. (November 2006). "The first randomized trial of aspirin for heart attack and the advent of systematic overviews of trials". Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine. 99 (11): 586–588. doi: 10.1177/014107680609901121. ISSN  0141-0768. PMC  1633560. PMID  17082305.

References

  1. ^ Jeffreys, Diarmuid (2010). Aspirin: The Extraordinary Story of a Wonder Drug. Bloomsbury Publishing. pp. 151, 214. ISBN  978-1-4088-2042-1.
  2. ^ "Research Spotlight: Professor Peter Elwood". Gair Rhydd. 29 February 2016. Archived from the original on 1 September 2023. Retrieved 31 August 2023.
  3. ^ a b Elwood, Peter (2002). "1964–69 Iron deficiency anaemia studies". In Ness, A R.; Reynolds, L A.; Tansey, E M. (eds.). Population-based research in South Wales : The MRC Pneumoconiosis Research Unit and the MRC Epidemiology Unit (PDF). London: Wellcome Trust Centre for the History of Medicine at UCL. pp. 70–71. ISBN  978-085484-081-6.

Further reading



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