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Bio
Associate Professor Mamun is an internationally recognised leader in the areas of life course epidemiology and intergenerational perspectives. An approach that situates the individual risk factors and their interaction within a context that determines health outcomes has been the underlying basis of his research. He is one of the Principal Investigator’s of the Mater-University of Queensland Study of Pregnancy (MUSP) cohort. Over the past 14 years, he has been leading the respiratory and cardiovascular epidemiology research in the MUSP that included 30 years follow-up of the MUSP offspring cohort (Gen 2) and the first follow-up of the children-of-the-offspring cohort (Gen 3). In recent years, he expanded his research in the low & middle income countries focusing on the rapid socio-economic development and the demographic and epidemiological transitions.
Mamun has made significant contributions to understand the critical stages of life and early life determinants of health. From the life course perspective, some of his papers are influential while thinking about the early development of health and well-being. For instance, his research confirmed that parents, especially mothers, are the role model for offspring health and well-being development from early life to adolescence and then to young adulthood. His research shows that weight management and prevention of obesity should start as early as possible even before or during pregnancy. He is interested to contribute new knowledge about the extent that socioeconomic, family and environmental factors track from generation to generation and how this impacts on health and well-being of the future generations.
Mamun has made significant contributions to understand the critical stages of life and early life determinants of health. From the life course perspective, some of his papers are influential while thinking about the early development of health and well-being. For instance, his research confirmed that parents, especially mothers, are the role model for offspring health and well-being development from early life to adolescence and then to young adulthood. His research shows that weight management and prevention of obesity should start as early as possible even before or during pregnancy. He is interested to contribute new knowledge about the extent that socioeconomic, family and environmental factors track from generation to generation and how this impacts on health and well-being of the future generations.
Research Interests
Papers共 393 篇Author StatisticsCo-AuthorSimilar Experts
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Obesity Research & Clinical Practiceno. 2 (2024): 147-153
PEDIATRIC PULMONOLOGYno. 1 (2024): 151-162
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HEALTH PLANNING AND MANAGEMENTno. 2 (2024): 329-342
crossref(2024)
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NUTRITIONno. 4 (2023): 1657-1666
LANCET REGIONAL HEALTH - SOUTHEAST ASIA (2023): 100164-100164
Australian and New Zealand Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology (2023)
The Lancet Regional Health - Southeast Asia (2023): 100164
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