Publications by authors named "A Bill Musk"

Article Synopsis
  • - The study analyzed smoking trends in Australia from 1910 to 2005, focusing on initiation and cessation rates among different age groups and genders to assess the impact of historical tobacco control policies.
  • - Among nearly 30,000 participants, 56.8% reported having smoked, with young males showing consistently high initiation rates from 1910-1999, while young females saw a significant rise in smoking in the 1960s and 1970s.
  • - The results revealed that while smoking cessation rates increased overall for ages 36-50, they plateaued for females and decreased for males post-1990, highlighting the varying effectiveness of tobacco control measures, particularly among younger individuals.
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Despite their increasing popularity, and Australia's unique regulatory environment, how and why Australian adults use e-cigarettes and their perceptions of their safety, efficacy and regulation have not been extensively reported before. In this study, we screened 2217 adult Australians with the aim of assessing these questions in a sample of current or former e-cigarette users. A total of 505 out of 2217 respondents were current or former e-cigarette users, with only these respondents completing the full survey.

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Introduction: We aimed to determine normal thresholds for positive bronchodilator responses for oscillometry in an Australian general population sample aged ≥40 years, to guide clinical interpretation. We also examined relationships between bronchodilator responses and respiratory symptoms, asthma diagnosis, smoking and baseline lung function.

Methods: Subjects recruited from Sydney, Melbourne and Busselton, Australia, underwent measurements of spirometry, resistance ( ) and reactance ( ) at 6 Hz, before and after inhalation of salbutamol 200 μg.

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Background: Normal airway microbial communities play a central role in respiratory health but are poorly characterized. Cigarette smoking is the dominant global environmental influence on lung function, and asthma has become the most prevalent chronic respiratory disease worldwide. Both conditions have major microbial components that are incompletely defined.

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