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Doctor Lee Nedkoff

University of Western Australia, Perth (Australia)

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Dr Nedkoff is a Senior Research Fellow in Cardiovascular Disease Epidemiology at The University of Western Australia, and a current National Heart Foundation Future Leader Fellow. She leads a research program focused on population-based studies measuring the burden of cardiovascular diseases, including coronary heart disease, stroke, peripheral arterial disease and atrial fibrillation. She has expertise in the use of multi-jurisdictional linked health data in cardiovascular epidemiological studies. A focus of her research is age-and sex-specific trends in acute coronary syndromes, and development of robust methods and analytic approaches for using linked data in cardiovascular disease research.

Characteristics and risk of coronary-related events following hospitalisation for chronic coronary disease

Event: ESC Preventive Cardiology 2023

Topic: Cardiovascular Epidemiology

Session: Moderated ePoster 24

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Burden of stroke incidence among atrial fibrillation, valvular heart disease and coronary heart disease patients

Event: ESC Preventive Cardiology 2022

Topic: Epidemiology

Session: Rapid fire abstracts session 2 - Population Science and Public Health

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Temporal trends in myocardial infarction case fatality: methodological challenges and prevention targets

Event: ESC Preventive Cardiology 2022

Topic: Epidemiology, Prognosis, Outcome

Session: Moderated posters session 1 - Population Science and Public Health

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Disparities in stroke and cardiovascular mortality outcomes in aboriginal and non-aboriginal western australians hospitalised with atrial fibrillation

Event: EuroPrevent 2018

Topic: Cardiovascular Disease in Special Populations, Other

Session: Rapid Fire Session II

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Comparative analyses of trends in hospitalisations for coronary heart disease subgroups in England and Australia

Event: EuroPrevent 2018

Topic: Epidemiology

Session: Moderated Poster Session II

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Continuing high-risk of long-term cardiovascular outcomes following acute coronary syndrome: a population-level cohort study

Event: ESC Congress 2016

Topic: Post infarction period

Session: Long-term out come after myocardial infarction

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Long-term trends in hospitalisation rates for coronary heart disease sub-types in the western australian population; a database study, 1995-2013

Event: ESC Congress 2016

Topic: Epidemiology, lipids

Session: Cardiovascular risk in populations

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