about
Neighbourhood built environment associations with body size in adults: mediating effects of activity and sedentariness in a cross-sectional study of New Zealand adults.Recent Trends in Alcohol and Other Drug Use Among Police Detainees in New Zealand, 2010-2015.Policy-Relevant Behaviors Predict Heavier Drinking in Both On and Off Premises and Mediate the Relationship Between Heavier Alcohol Consumption and Age, Gender, and Socioeconomic Status-Analysis from the International Alcohol Control Study.Associations between the neighbourhood built environment and out of school physical activity and active travel: An examination from the Kids in the City study.Children's Out-of-School Independently Mobile Trips, Active Travel, and Physical Activity: A Cross-Sectional Examination from the Kids in the City Study.The International Alcohol Control Study: Methodology and implementation.Are government-approved products containing new psychoactive substances perceived to be safer and more socially acceptable than alcohol, tobacco and illegal drugs? Findings from a survey of police arrestees in New Zealand.Policy-relevant behaviours predict heavier drinking and mediate the relationship with age, gender and education status: Analysis from the International Alcohol Control study.Cross-country comparison of proportion of alcohol consumed in harmful drinking occasions using the International Alcohol Control Study.Primary health care access and ambulatory sensitive hospitalizations in New Zealand.The impact of the prohibition of benzylpiperazine (BZP) "legal highs" on the availability, price and strength of BZP in New Zealand.Long-term impact on alcohol-involved crashes of lowering the minimum purchase age in New Zealand.Availability of alcohol: Location, time and ease of purchase in high- and middle-income countries: Data from the International Alcohol Control study.Do police arrestees substitute legal highs for other drugs?Drinking patterns vary by gender, age and country-level income: Cross-country analysis of the International Alcohol Control StudyReduction in Late-Night Violence following the Introduction of National New Zealand Trading Hour Restrictions
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P50
description
researcher ORCID ID = 0000-0003-0858-1826
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wetenschapper
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name
Karl Parker
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Karl Parker
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Karl Parker
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Karl Parker
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Karl Parker
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Karl Parker
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Karl Parker
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Karl Parker
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Karl Parker
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Karl Parker
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Karl Parker
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Karl Parker
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55627648900
P31
P496
0000-0003-0858-1826