Publications by authors named "Jagger H"

Objective: To examine the effect of phosphate supplements on calcium homeostasis and bone turnover in young men.

Design: Study 1 was a randomised, controlled, cross-over trial of 1000 mg elemental phosphate given for one week, with a standard diet of 800 mg/d each of calcium and phosphorus. Study 2 was an escalating dose study of 0, 1000, 1500 and 2000 mg/d elemental phosphate, each given for one week, with a standard diet of 1000 mg/d each of calcium and phosphate.

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Between 1981 and 1988, the Minnesota Department of Health actively responded to over 400 reports from persons concerned about disease occurrence in their community, school, or workplace. Almost all of these reports involved perceived excesses of cases of cancer. Although there is little potential for identifying unsuspected public health problems or developing new etiologic insights, the Minnesota Department of Health has found that responding to reported clusters is a legitimate and necessary public health activity.

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A cross-sectional study was conducted from 1979 through 1982 in three rural Minnesota cities to describe the natural history of diabetes mellitus. Detailed abstracts of the medical records of physician-defined diabetic individuals were used to construct medical profiles. As part of the effort, the date of physician-defined hypertension was identified and used to calculate hypertension prevalence.

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The Minnesota Department of Health has completed a 2-year feasibility study comparing the completeness and accuracy of information from pathology-based cancer ascertainment with that of the traditional surveillance method based on hospital discharge records. Overall, for incident cancers, the primary site designation of the pathology-based system was correct for 94.5% of the cancers, and the histologic designation was correct for 97.

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The Minnesota Department of Health (MDH) in concert with the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) conducted population-based studies of diabetes mellitus in three Minnesota communities. The use of hospital and clinic records alone for case ascertainment purposes would have missed 16% of study-eligible diabetic individuals. Thus, studies that use only hospital or clinic records may present a biased view of the natural history of diabetes.

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This investigation examined the accuracy of recall of females to questions concerning ages at memarche, natural and surgical menopause, first use of oral contraceptives and mean menstrual cycle length and variance. A sample of 160 women who had recorded their menstrual and reproductive events as they occurred were administered a questionnaire concerning these events, with responses compared to the original data. For the variables age at menarche, age at natural memopause, age at surgical menopause and age at first use of oral contraceptives, the percentage of women who correctly recalled within a year ranged from 75% to 90%.

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