Hannah Edwards/Cox Profile
Hannah Edwards/Cox

@HannahB_Edwards

Followers
7
Following
28
Media
1
Statuses
20

Bristol, UK
Joined September 2023
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@BMJ_Qual_Saf
BMJ Quality & Safety
8 days
The PRrevention of Cerebral palsy in PreTerm labour (PReCePT) programme, an evidence-based quality improvement intervention, boosted antenatal magnesium sulfate use in England from 66% to 86% over 5 years. Using a quasi-experimental design, @HannahB_Edwards, @KarenLuyt &
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@ARC_West
NIHR Applied Research Collaboration (ARC) West
3 months
New project on our website: An international review of the use of magnesium sulfate to protect against cerebral palsy. Building on the life changing work of the PReCePT programme @KarenLuyt @healthinnowest https://t.co/hNATRItlMM
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arc-w.nihr.ac.uk
Babies born prematurely have a higher risk of brain injury, which can lead to cerebral palsy. We know that giving the drug magnesium sulfate (MgSO4) to the mum when she is in preterm labour can...
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@HannahB_Edwards
Hannah Edwards/Cox
5 months
Grand day out today at the #ChildHealthImpact2025 conference 😊
@Peninsula_ARC
PenARC (NIHR ARC South West Peninsula)
5 months
More fascinating sessions from Hannah Edwards, Ben Hughes, Peter Day & Zoe Marshman. Presentations cover PReCePT, the Bradford ACE Service and BRUSH. 👉 Find out more here: https://t.co/0C0NeZpl9U #ChildHealthImpact2025 @NIHRresearch @NIHR_ARC_YH
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@ARC_West
NIHR Applied Research Collaboration (ARC) West
7 months
Implementation of national guidelines on antenatal magnesium sulfate for neonatal neuroprotection: extended evaluation of the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of the National PReCePT Programme in England Read the full paper https://t.co/wZDOpqDbRL
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qualitysafety.bmj.com
Background Since 2015, the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) guidelines have recommended antenatal magnesium sulfate (MgSO4) for mothers in preterm labour (<30 weeks’ gestati...
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@ARC_West
NIHR Applied Research Collaboration (ARC) West
7 months
Our new research published in @BMJ_Qual_Saf reinforces the impact of PReCePT, the cerebral palsy prevention programme to promote the use of magnesium sulfate. We compared use of magnesium sulfate before and 4 years after PReCePT, and in Wales and Scotland https://t.co/Kq5GPWTT0C
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arc-w.nihr.ac.uk
Evidence for the impact of a programme to increase the use of magnesium sulfate, a ÂŁ5 injection that helps prevent cerebral palsy in premature babies, has been strengthened by a new study published...
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@HannahB_Edwards
Hannah Edwards/Cox
7 months
Happy news from our PReCePT programme: concerted national efforts can effectively and cost-effectively improve quality of perinatal care, helping protect preterm babies ❤️
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qualitysafety.bmj.com
Background Since 2015, the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) guidelines have recommended antenatal magnesium sulfate (MgSO4) for mothers in preterm labour (<30 weeks’ gestati...
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@TristanCorkPost
Tristan Cork Post
7 months
A new study has found in areas where e-scooters are legal, the number of cyclists injured on the roads has declined, lending further weight to the 'safety in numbers' hypothesis. What does it mean for e-scooters, the 'trial' & the law? Full explainer here: https://t.co/gZk0JLmh5H
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bristolpost.co.uk
Bristol Uni researchers reveal a surprising effect of letting e-scooters onto the roads
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@ARC_West
NIHR Applied Research Collaboration (ARC) West
8 months
ICYMI Professor Yoav Ben-Shlomo was on @BBCBristol on Tuesday being interviewed by @brionymaybakes. He was talking about our natural experiment on the impact of e-scooter schemes on bike collisions. He's on at 3:19! https://t.co/aRQBKrsp0g
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@Dott
Dott
8 months
"Micromobility Safety in numbers": very interesting study from University of Bristol @ARC_West (led by @HannahB_Edwards) showing shared electric scooters reduce cyclist collisions by 20% 🛴🚲. Using police data. Read more >>  https://t.co/LwiIRj4zES
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road.cc
University of Bristol research explored "micromobility safety in numbers" hypothesis, that the more people ditch their cars for bikes or e-scooter hires the safer they become, possibly by making...
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@HannahB_Edwards
Hannah Edwards/Cox
8 months
Local Transport Minister @simonlightwood MP: “We’re looking to blend healthy, greener transport choices that give people greater choice over how they travel. That’s why it’s great to see this research showing areas with our e-scooter trials are now a safer place for cyclists.”
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@HannahB_Edwards
Hannah Edwards/Cox
8 months
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@HannahB_Edwards
Hannah Edwards/Cox
8 months
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@BristolUni
University of Bristol
8 months
🚲🛴 Bicycle collisions dropped by 20% in e-scooter scheme areas, new research has found. The study supports the "safety in numbers" effect. More bicycles & e-scooters = safer streets. ➡️ https://t.co/zWlsg8G3OR #cycling #escooters #saferstreets @ARC_West @NIHRresearch
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@ARC_West
NIHR Applied Research Collaboration (ARC) West
8 months
We tested the 'safety in numbers' hypothesis to see whether e-scooter schemes have affected bicycle collisions, using police data. Our natural experiment found e-scooter schemes appear to reduce the risk of bicycle collisions by around 20%. #RoadSafety https://t.co/fb0QVlj6fc
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