TUESDAY, 23 February 2016 rd

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TUESDAY, 23rd February 2016
Half-day workshop
Create behaviour change by designing effective digital interventions
(Facilitators: Caroline Wood and Rosie Webster)
New technologies are increasingly being used for health promotion; however, researchers and practitioners often lack knowledge regarding
the process of developing such interventions. This half-day workshop will introduce the Behaviour Change Wheel for developing behaviour
change interventions and debate the challenges of designing digital interventions (e.g. online or mobile phone). Participants will plan an
idea for a potential intervention, deciding on the target group, the intervention aim, and which elements of behavio ur to change. They will
develop ideas for technological 'features' using behaviour change techniques.
PLEASE NOTE: THIS WORKSHOP IS NOT INCLUDED IN YOUR CONFERENCE REGISTRATION
AND MUST BE BOOKED SEPERATELY via the conference website
www.ucl.ac.uk/behaviour-change/CBC_Conference_2016
Wednesday, 24th February 2016
Opportunities and Challenges: Using digital health to support wellbeing
09.00-10.00
Registration and Coffee / Tea
10.00-10.10
Conference Welcome: Prof Susan Michie (UCL Centre for Behaviour Change) – In Beveridge Hall
10.10-10.40
Opening Keynote: Dr Cecily Morrison (Microsoft Research Cambridge) - Introduced by Ann Blandford (University College London)
10.45-12.00
12.00-13.00
13.00-14.15
14.15-14.30
↓ CHANCELLOR’S HALL ↓
↓ BEVERIDGE HALL ↓
Prompting health behaviour
mHealth: Monitoring and intervention
Chair: Rosie Webster (Breast Cancer Now)
Chair: Irina Osovskaya (Janssen)
Strategies for enhancing the impact of digital prompts to
behaviour
Designing mobile solutions to support the self-management of
health: current issues and challenges
Katarzyna Stawarz (University College London)
Ghadah Alkhaldi (University College London)
Clare Stevens (University College London)
Chris Keyworth (University of Manchester)
Amy Hardy & Anna Wojdecka
Luca Canzian (University of Birmingham)
Shruti Grover (Helen Hamlyn Centre for Design)
Emma Beard (University College London)
Lunch, posters and demos
Symposium: Using smartphones to reduce harmful
drinking
Panel discussion: Driving behaviour change in the
sustainability arena
Discussant: Susan Michie (University College London)
Chair: Andrew Smith (ZapCarbon Ltd.)
Four projects focused on the design, delivery and evaluation of
apps for alcohol reduction
Practitioners and academics unite to share their practical
experiences and lessons learned
Claire Garnett (University College London)
David Crane (University College London)
Joanna Milward (King’s College London)
Gautam Mehta (University College London)
Gerd Kortuem (Open University)
John Bailey (University of London)
Robin Feeley (London and Quadrant Housing)
Andrew Smith (ZapCarbon Ltd.)
Comfort break
Self-management of long-term conditions
14.30-15.45
(King’s College London and
The Royal College of Art)
Chair: Victoria Betton (NHS Leeds and Yorkshire)
Intervention development: approaches, insights and
funding
Chair: Felix Naughton (University of Cambridge)
Featuring research on barriers, facilitators and methodological
approaches to supporting patient self-management
Four talks focused on the process of intervention development and
opportunities for funding
Heather Morgan (University of Aberdeen)
Carolyn Wilson (University of Salford)
Kingshuk Pal (University College London)
Deirdre Walsh (Dublin City University)
Hannah Jennings (University College London)
Sharon Simpson (University of Glasgow)
Alex Matei (Bupa)
Lucy Davies (Cancer Research UK)
15.45-16.15
Coffee / Tea and Networking / Cancer Research UK drop-in funding clinic: Pioneers, sandpits, and selfies: funding
16.15-17.15
Panel discussion: The role of digital health in reducing
stigma of mental health
innovation in research (Beveridge Hall)
Chair: Lisa Muller (Time to Change)
Panel discussion: Challenges to creating sustainable,
high impact interventions
Chair: Fiona Adshead (Bupa)
Explores the role of digital technology as both a help and a
hindrance in addressing stigma and discrimination
A lively discussion of challenges (and potential solutions) to realising
the promise of digital interventions for health and wellbeing
Kate Nightingale (Time to Change)
Becca Peters (Time to Change)
Rebecca Cotton (Mental Health Network)
Susan Michie (University College London)
Emile Glazer (Eclipse Experience)
Dustin DiTommaso (Mad*Pow)
Jussi Tolvi (Club Soda)
Robert West (University College London)
17.20-17.50
Closing Keynote: Prof. John Powell (University of Oxford) – introduced by Susan Michie (University College London) in Beveridge Hall
17.50-19.30
Prize Poster Session and Networking Reception (Crush Hall)
Thursday, 25th February 2016
Evaluation and Implementation: Guiding the future of digital health
08.30-09.00
Registration
9.00-10.15
↓ CHANCELLOR’S HALL ↓
↓ BEVERIDGE HALL ↓
Diverse intervention contexts
Symposium: Digital interventions to reduce harmful
drinking – outcomes and mechanisms of action
Chair: Shoba Poduval (University College London)
Chair: Susan Michie (University College London)
Celebrating the scope of digital technologies for promoting health
and wellbeing
Emma Norris (University College London)
Cindy Gray (University of Glasgow)
Andrew Smith (ZapCarbon)
Grigorios Kotronoulas (University of Surrey)
10.15-10.45
10.45-12.00
Featuring the latest research examining the content and impact of
digital interventions targeting excessive drinking
Colin Muirhead (Newcastle University)
Jamie Brown (University College London)
Claire Garnett (University College London)
Fiona Beyer (Newcastle University)
Coffee / Tea and Networking
Panel Discussion: Addressing challenges in evaluating
digital smoking cessation interventions
Games for health
Chair: Henry Potts (University College London)
Chair: Robert West (University College London)
Solving methodological dilemmas in intervention evaluation
Olga Perski (University College London)
David Crane (University College London)
Aleksandra Herbec (University College London)
Ildiko Tombor (University College London)
12.00-13.00
Chair: Leanne Morrison (University of Southampton)
13.00-14.15
Digital interventions for young adults
Chair: Helen Atherton (University of Warwick)
Supporting public health across the lifespan using digital
technologies
Strategies for engaging young adults in health behaviour change and
the self-management of chronic conditions
Marta Marques (University of Lisbon)
Harald Schjelderup-Lund (Changetech)
Suvi Määttä (Folkhälsan Research Centre)
Veronica Reynolds (Intelligent Health)
Dominik Beste (University College London)
Niranjan Bidargaddi (Flinders University)
Margaret Allman-Farinelli (University of Sydney)
Comfort break
14.30-15.45
16.00-16.30
Elizabeth Edwards (London School of Medicine and Dentistry)
Sorcha Moore (Prescot Medical Centre)
Anne Martin (University of Edinburgh)
Lunch, posters and demos
Supporting a healthy lifestyle
14.15-14.30
Examining the role of games and game mechanics for supporting
health behaviour
Smoking cessation and substance misuse
Social media and online support
Chair: Jamie Brown (University College London)
Chair: Patty Kostkova (University College London)
Focused on the evaluation of digital services to improve access,
engagement and implementation
Highlighting the versatility of digital technologies for supporting
health and wellbeing
Sarah Ellison (Breaking Free Online)
Stephanie Dugdale (Breaking Free Online)
Emily Fulton (Coventry University)
Felix Naughton (University of Cambridge)
Nikki Newhouse (University College London)
Aileen McGloin (Safefood Ireland)
Sarah Chapman (University College London)
Julia Bailey (University College London)
Closing Keynote: Dr Donna Spruijt-Metz (University of Southern California) – Introduced by Patty Kostkova (University College London) in Beveridge
Hall
16.30-17.00
Conference Closing Words: Prof Susan Michie (UCL Centre for Behaviour Change)
LIST OF ORAL PRESENTATIONS / SYMPOSIA & PRESENTERS
WEDNESDAY 24TH FEBRUARY
PROMPTING BEHAVIOUR (10.45 – 12.00)
Katarzyna Stawarz (University College London)
Understanding the role of contextual cues in supporting the formation of medication-taking habits
Ghadah Alkhaldi (University College London)
Enhancing engagement with a digital intervention using email and text message prompts: a usability study
Clare Stevens (University College London)
Evaluating the Risk Acceptance Ladder (RAL) as a basis for targeting communication aimed at prompting
attempts to improve health related behaviours: A pilot randomised controlled trial
Chris Keyworth (University of Manchester)
Healthcare professional behaviour change using technological supports: A realist literature review
MHEALTH: MONITORING AND INTERVENTION (10.45 – 12.00)
Amy Hardy (King’s College London) / Anna Wojdecka (Helen Hamlyn Centre for Design)
Designing the future of talking therapy: Using digital health to improve outcomes in psychosis
Luca Canzian (University of Birmingham)
From Mobile Phone Monitoring of Depressive States using GPS Traces Analysis to Data-Driven Behaviour Change
Interventions
Shruti Grover (Helen Hamlyn Centre for Design)
Designing a gamified, ability-appropriate diagnostics and training program for a Balance Health application
Emma Beard (University College London)
Assessing the efficacy of mobile phone interventions using randomised controlled trials: issues and their
solutions
SYMPOSIUM: USING SMARTPHONES TO REDUCE HARMFUL DRINKING (13.00 – 14.15)
Claire Garnett (University College London)
Selecting intervention components for a smartphone app (‘Drink Less’) to help people reduce hazardous and/or
harmful drinking
David Crane (University College London)
Usability of a smartphone app to reduce excessive alcohol consumption
Joanna Milward (King’s College London)
Developing an app to reduce harmful drinking in young adults: A user perspective
Gautam Mehta (University College London)
AlcoChange: An Open Label Pilot Study of Smartphone Monitoring for Alcoholic Liver Disease
PANEL DISCUSSION: DRIVING BEHAVIOUR CHANGE IN THE SUSTAINABILITY ARENA (13.00-14.15)
Gerd Kortuem (Open University)
John Bailey (University of London)
Robin Feeley (London and Quadrant Housing)
Andrew Smith (ZapCarbon Ltd.)
SELF MANAGEMENT OF LONG-TERM CONDITIONS (14.30 – 15.45)
Heather Morgan (University of Aberdeen)
@selfhealthtech: Using self-administered health monitoring technologies to support the self-management of
long-term conditions: what about behaviour change?
Carolyn Wilson (University of Salford)
VitruCare: Using digital health to overcome the bounded willpower of patients with long term conditions
Kingshuk Pal (University College London)
Integrating theory and data to create an online self-management programme for adults with type 2 diabetes:
HeLP-Diabetes
Deirdre Walsh (Dublin City University)
Barriers and motivators in engaging with technology-enabled cardiac rehabilitation: a patient and health
professional perspective
INTERVENTION DEVELOPMENT: APPROACHES, INSIGHTS AND FUNDING (14.30 – 15.45)
Hannah Jennings (University College London)
Digital Bangladesh: Using Formative Research to Develop Phone Messages for the Prevention and Control of
Diabetes in Rural Bangladesh.
Sharon Simpson (University of Glasgow)
Mobilising social support: insights from the development of a web and app based intervention.
Alex Matei (Bupa)
Machine learning for digital behaviour change interventions (DCBIs) (tbc)
Lucy Davies (Cancer Research UK)
Pioneers, sandpits, and selfies: funding innovation in research
NB. A drop-in clinic hosted by Cancer Research UK: ‘Pioneers, Sandpits, and Selfies: funding innovation in
research’ will take place in the break directly after this session
PANEL DISCUSSION: THE ROLE OF DIGITAL HEALTH IN REDUCING STIGMA OF MENTAL HEALTH (16.15 – 17.15)
Kate Nightingale (Time to Change)
Becca Peters (Time to Change)
Rebecca Cotton (Mental Health Network)
PANEL DISCUSSION: CHALLENGES TO CREATING SUSTAINABLE, HIGH IMPACT INTERVENTIONS (16.15 – 17.15)
Susan Michie (University College London)
Emile Glazer (Eclipse Experience)
Dustin DiTommaso (Mad*Pow)
Jussi Tolvi (Club Soda)
Robert West (University College London)
THURSDAY 25TH FEBRUARY
DIVERSE INTERVENTION CONTEXTS (9.00-10.15)
Emma Norris (University College London)
Development of Virtual Traveller: A behaviour change intervention to increase physical activity during primary
school lessons
Cindy Gray (University of Glasgow)
MyCity: Glasgow – how can a mobile app based game increase physical activity in the context of a mass
spectator sporting event?
Andrew Smith (ZapCarbon)
Quantifying Behaviour Change in reducing environmental impact within large organisations - 3 case studies from
the UK
Grigorios Kotronoulas (University of Surrey)
Enabling symptom self-management via use of an electronic patient-reported outcomes (ePRO) system to
increase self-efficacy of patients with cancer receiving active chemotherapy treatment
SYMPOSIUM: DIGITAL INTERVENTIONS TO REDUCE HARMFUL DRINKING – OUTCOMES AND MECHANISMS OF ACTION
(9.00 – 10.15)
Colin Muirhead (Newcastle University)
Personalised digital interventions for reducing hazardous and harmful alcohol consumption in communitydwelling populations
Jamie Brown (University College London)
Behaviour change techniques used in digital interventions to reduce excessive alcohol consumption
Claire Garnett (University College London)
Theory content of digital interventions for reducing alcohol consumption: a systematic review
Fiona Beyer (Newcastle University)
Acceptability of and engagement with digital interventions for reducing hazardous or harmful alcohol
consumption in community-dwelling populations: a systematic review
PANEL DISCUSSION: ADDRESSING CHALLENGES IN EVALUATING DIGITAL SMOKING CESSATION INTERVENTIONS
(10.45 – 12.00)
Olga Perski (University College London)
What can different user engagement measures tell us in RCTs of smoking cessation smartphone apps?
David Crane (University College London)
How different ways of treating missing values can be used to arrive at confident statements about intervention
effectiveness in RCTs of smoking cessation apps?
Aleksandra Herbec (University College London)
Selection of comparators in a RCT of a smoking cessation app. An example of a ‘minimum credible intervention’
Ildiko Tombor (University College London)
Strengths and weaknesses of using factorial designs to evaluate intervention components in a smoking cessation
app
GAMES FOR HEALTH (10.45 – 12.00)
Elizabeth Edwards (London School of Medicine and Dentistry)
‘Gamification’ for Health Behaviour Change in Smartphone Apps
Sorcha Moore (Prescot Medical Centre)
Fighting “zombie” health apps through K-Factor virality and other mobile gaming techniques – The application of
commercial gaming techniques to create more effective mHealth solutions
Anne Martin (University of Edinburgh)
Beyond the novelty effect: The role of in-game challenges, rewards and choices for long-term motivation to
improve obesity-related health behaviours in adolescents
SUPPORTING A HEALTHY LIFESTYLE (13.00 – 14.15)
Marta Marques (University of Lisbon)
Designing evidence and theory-based ICT tools for weight loss maintenance: the H2020 NoHoW toolkit
Harald Schjelderup-Lund (Changetech)
The development of Easychange (tbc)
Suvi Määttä (Folkhälsan Research Centre)
User experiences of wearable activity monitor among 3-6-year-old preschool children – Are children willing to
wear monitor 7 days 24 hours per day?
Veronica Reynolds (Intelligent Health)
Beat the Street in Reading. A city-wide physical activity intervention to get a whole population active using
RFID/NFC technology
DIGITAL INTERVENTIONS FOR YOUNG ADULTS (13.00 – 14.15)
Alice Cai (University College London)
Developing a smartphone application to improve care and outcomes in adolescent arthritis through patient
input
Niranjan Bidargaddi (Flinders University)
Effective strategies to recruit young adults into an online wellbeing intervention
Margaret Allman-Farinelli (University of Sydney)
Maintenance of behaviour change after a 12-week mHealth lifestyle programme for young adults.
SMOKING CESSATION AND SUBSTANCE MISUSE (14.30 – 15.45)
Sarah Ellison (Breaking Free Online)
Initial findings from a mixed-methods evaluation of computer-assisted therapy for substance misuse in
prisoners: Development, implementation and clinical outcomes from the ‘Breaking Free Health & Justice’
treatment and recovery programme
Stephanie Dugdale (Breaking Free Online)
A comprehensive, multi-level investigation of the implementation of a novel digital substance misuse
intervention, Breaking Free Online: conceptualising implementation processes within services using the MRC
framework and health psychology theory.
Emily Fulton (Coventry University)
A digital intervention to increase motivation and access to NHS Stop Smoking Services: Applying the
Behaviour Change Wheel to develop the ‘Stop-app’.
Felix Naughton (University of Cambridge)
Speed of engagement with support generated by a smoking cessation smartphone Just In Time Adaptive
Intervention (JITAI)
SOCIAL MEDIA AND ONLINE SUPPORT (14.30 – 15.45)
Nikki Newhouse (University College London)
Exploring the potential of digital resources as a source of social support in first time pregnancy
Aileen McGloin (Safefood Ireland)
'Babies know the Facts about Folic': A behavioral Change Campaign utilizing Digital and Social Media
Sarah Chapman (University College London)
A pilot controlled trial to determine the feasibility, acceptability and effectiveness of a PAPA-based online
intervention to address practical and perceptual barriers to medication adherence in Inflammatory Bowel
Disease.
Julia Bailey (University College London)
Digital health promotion in sexual health clinics: results of a feasibility trial of the Men’s Safer Sex website
LIST OF POSTER PRESENTATIONS
WEDNESDAY 24TH FEBRUARY – LUNCHTIME (12.00 – 13.00) in Macmillan Hall
mHEALTH
1.
Suzanne McDonagh (University of Ulster)
Developing a mobile app for the rehabilitation of ankle sprains
2.
Abdullah Alsharif (Kingston University)
Model for implementing cognitive behavioural therapy for smartphone app-based smoking cessation
program
3.
Bob Patton (University of Surrey / King’s College London)
e-IBA: Development of new technology to reduce adolescent alcohol use
4.
Audrey de Nazelle (Imperial College London)
Influencing people for healthier and more sustainable travel behaviours using smart phone technology
5.
Lukas Ingersoli (Purdue University)
mHealth to improve the diet among low-income populations enrolled in an established US nutrition program:
design and rationale of a randomised controlled trial
6.
Marie Johnston (University of Aberdeen)
Increasing skin self-examination after melanoma: an intervention using text and tablet delivery
HEALTH PROMOTION AND PREVENTION
7.
Herman A. Van Wietmarschen (TNO, Netherlands)
Digital technologies to generate health awareness
8.
Fatima Wurle (University College London)
Health informatics to improve the health of homeless and marginalised populations
9.
Paul Varga (Playbrush, UK)
Playbrush – Transforming toothbrushes into gaming controllers
10.
Manu Savani (University College London)
Can commitment devices improve usage of online weight loss tools? A field experiment
11.
Dragana Brdaric (Novi Sad, Serbia)
Baseline socio-demographic characteristics of participants and dropout in web-based weight reduction program in
Serbia
12.
Paul Pook (Pook Performance Ltd.)
Aspire Project – an integrated wellness coaching model facilitated by an online coaching technology
13.
Sally Pezaro (Coventry University)
What should be prioritised in the development of an online intervention designed to support midwives in workrelated psychological distress? An exploratory Delphi survey
MATERNAL AND FAMILY HEALTH
14.
Emma Haycraft (Loughborough University)
Development and preliminary evaluation of the Child Feeding Guide website and app: A tool to support
caregivers with promoting health eating in children
15.
Babs Evans (National Charity Partnership)
Developing a free and easy way to use digital goal setting tool for busy mums
16.
Natalie Pearson (Loughborough University)
A pilot, family-based randomised controlled trial to reduce screen time and unhealthy snacking in
children and their parents: Kids FIRST
17.
Aiofe Lynch (University College Cork)
Development of a mobile health application for those who have experienced pregnancy loss
18.
Caragh Flannery (NUI Galway)
Experiences of lifestyle management and support during pregnancy: a qualitative study of the attitudes
and experiences of pregnant women and healthcare professionals
19.
Angeline Traynor (NUI Galway)
Development of feeling better: A web-based pain management programme for children with chronic pain and
their parents
USER ENGAGEMENT AND USER-DRIVEN DEVELOPMENT
20.
Kate Greenwell (NIHR Nottingham Hearing Biomedical Research Unit)
Exploring the acceptability of an internet-based self-management intervention for people with tinnitus: A
qualitative study
21.
Deirdre Walsh (Dublin City University)
An assessment of patient need for a technology-enabled remote exercise rehabilitation programme among a
chronic illness population
22.
Sarah Taki (University of Technology Sydney)
Exploration of mothers’ engagement with the Growing Healthy program: a week-by-week app to
promote healthy infant feeding practices
23.
Aisling Ann O’Kane (University College London)
DIY health and wellbeing: the hackers and makers outpacing manufacturers and researchers
24.
Ekaterina Volkova-Volkmar (Digital Healthcare, Bupa)
Consumer perceptions of digital health coaching
25.
Jim Lumsden (University of Bristol)
Gamification of cognitive assessment and cognitive training: a systematic review of applications,
approaches and efficacy
WEDNESDAY 24TH FEBRUARY – EVENING RECEPTION (PRIZE-NOMINATED POSTER PRESENTATIONS) – In Crush Hall
26.
Christine Cassidy (Dalhousie University, Canada)
What is the extent of theory in computer-based sexual health promotion interventions?
27.
Peter Pirolli (Palo Alto Research Center)
User modelling and planning for improving self-efficacy and goal adherence in mHealth
28.
Juliana Chen (University of Sydney)
Popular weight-management apps: their use and quality
29.
Anne Lancaster (BetterPoints, UK)
BetterPoints: Motivating behaviour change using technology-driven incentivisation
30.
Emily Tims (Little Nudge)
“Little Nudge”: an evaluation of the feasibility of using activity-reminder computer software in office workers to
increase movement at work
31.
Alice Forster (University College London)
The challenges of co-developing a behaviour change app that aimed to make physical activity a habit
32.
Sumit Mehra (Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences)
Attitudes of older adults towards a blended exercise program
33.
Mary Hassandra (University of Jyvaskyla)
An mHealth intervention: Associations between Theory of Planned Behaviour constructs for physical activity and
longitudinal smoking related behavioural data
34.
Mark Orme (Loughborough University)
The feasibility of a home-based sedentary behaviour intervention for hospitalised chronic obstructive pulmonary
disease (COPD) patients: Sitting and ExacerbAtions Trial (COPD-SEAT)
35.
Carolynn Greene (Middlesex University)
The self-management of chronic pain through the use of a smartphone application: an interpretative
phenomenological approach
36.
Adrian Taylor (Plymouth University Peninsula Schools of Medicine and Dentistry)
Can adding web-based support to UK primary care exercise referral schemes improve patients’ physical activity
levels? Intervention development for the e-coachER study
37.
Adrian Taylor (Plymouth University Peninsula Schools of Medicine and Dentistry)
Can adding web-based support to UK primary care exercise referral schemes improve patients’ physical activity
levels? Findings from an internal pilot study
38.
Sarah Taki (University of Technology Sydney)
The development and application of an engagement index on the participants’ use of an infant feeding app: the
Growing Healthy program
39.
Maxine Whelan (Loughborough University)
Can fMRI help optimise lifestyle behaviour change feedback from wearable technologies?
40.
Patapia Tzotzoli (iConcipio Ltd.)
The development and evaluation of an online intervention, ‘MePlusMe’, supporting mood, wellbeing, study skills
and everyday functioning in students in higher education
41.
Claire Harding (University of Chester)
Ethics and governance in digital mental health research – a joint academic and provider perspective
42.
Lenneke Van Genugten (Phillips Research, Netherlands)
Psychological health coaching for chronically ill in a tele-health context: a pilot study
43.
Rebecca Laidlaw (University of Strathclyde)
A qualitative study to inform the design, content and structure of an interactive SMS messaging service in
Chikwawa, Malawi
44.
Gaston Antezana (Flinders University)
Behaviour Change Techniques embedded in health and lifestyle apps: coding and analysis
45.
Jussi Tovli (Club Soda)
Scalable alcohol interventions – an online ‘Month off Booze’ programme
46.
Laura Condon (University of Nottingham)
Adolescent perspectives of BCTs in a serious game: PEGASO case study
THURSDAY 25TH FEBRUARY – LUNCHTIME – In Macmillan Hall
PROMOTING HEALTH IN YOUNG PEOPLE
47.
Sue Mann (University College London)
Implementation of digital interventions for sexual health for young people
48.
Laura Condon (University of Nottingham)
Integration of BCTs in a companion app to support and motivate teenagers in the adoption of healthy lifestyle
behaviours
49.
Susanna Linden (BZhA, Germany)
From a target group towards interaction group: Alcohol preventions policy regarding young people in Germany
50.
Mari Punna (JAMK University of Applied Sciences)
Development of students’ eHealth, mHealth and serious games expertise in health behaviour change during
health and social studies
51.
Reetta Lehto (Folkhalsan Research Centre, Finland)
Planning a preschool intervention in Finland – how to use digital technologies to increase community spirit and
promote health energy balance-related behaviours?
52.
Wouter Boendermaker (University of Amsterdam)
Exploring elements of fun to motivate heavy drinking youth to (re)train cognition
WEARABLES AND SENSOR TECHNOLOGY
53.
Amelia Martin (Bristol University)
SPHERE’s ‘Dress sense’ a multi-disciplinary approach to designing wearable technology to improve health
54.
Temitayo A. Olugbade (University College London)
Building an intelligent wearable movement tracking device to address psychological barriers to mobility in chronic
musculoskeletal pain
55.
Johanna Nurmi (University of Helsinki)
A personalised, sensor-based smart phone intervention for physical activity and diet – PRECIOUS N-of-1 trial
56.
Sander Hermsen (Utrecht University of Applied Sciences)
Take it slow: can feedback from a smart fork reduce eating speed?
57.
Jennifer Murphy (Imperial College London)
Quantified-self for obesity: Physical activity behaviour sensing to improve health outcomes
58.
Ronan Carter (Yomp)
The application of behaviour change theory, delivered through mobile-app and wearable-based technology,
proven to engage and improve the health and wellbeing of population. A case study
SELF-MANAGEMENT OF LONG-TERM CONDITIONS
59.
Alice Berry (University of the West of England)
Digital behaviour change interventions for Osteoarthritis – a systematic literature review
60.
Aneesha Singh (University College London)
Tracking, analysis and sonification of movement and breathing for supporting physical activity in chronic pain
using the Go-forth-with-the-flow framework
61.
Brian Slattery (NUI Galway)
Comparing the effectiveness of an internet-delivered Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) intervention
with a wait list control on health related quality of life among adults with multimorbidity: Study protocol for a
randomised controlled trial
62.
Albert De Graaf (TNO, Netherlands)
Multiscale immune system stimulator for the onset of Type-2 diabetes for use in online decision support
and coaching tools
63.
Aija Lahdesmaki (Laurea University of Applied Sciences)
Mobile applications for chronic disease self-management: building a bridge for behaviour change
64.
Patrycja Puszkiewicz (University College London)
Developing a mobile app for the rehabilitation of ankle sprains
POLICY AND HEALTH CARE SERVICES
65.
Jana Dale (NHS England)
NHS England Patient Online – Patient access to their medical record in general practice
66.
Alistair Connell (University College London)
DARE-AKI: Does enhanced detection, clinical analytics, referral and early therapy improve AKI outcomes in
secondary care?
67.
Giorgos Iniatis (Freelancer, Cyprus)
Using new technologies for improving psychotropic medication adherence
68.
Sarah Meaney (University College Cork)
Reactions to adverse incidents in the health services on Twitter: a mixed methods study
69.
Gillian Fergie (University of Glasgow)
Right here right now: Developing an understanding of responses to smoking policy developments using online
data collection in near to real time
70.
Harald Schjeiderup-Jung (Changetech, Norway)
Innovative use of behaviour change programs in the Norwegian public healthcare system
PHYSICAL ACTIVITY
71.
Emma Coombes (Norwich Medical School)
The role of travel mode in engagement with a Radio Frequency ID chip-based school physical activity
intervention
72.
Pelin Ozhur Polat (University of St. Andrews)
Designing Gain- and Loss-framed messages to increase physical activity among university students living in two
different cultures
73.
Manon Dontje (Glasgow Caledonian University)
Why older adults spend time sedentary and break their sedentary behaviour: a mixed methods approach using
life-logging equipment
74.
Clair McCallum (University of Glasgow)
Evaluation methods for physical activity-promoting mobile technologies: an interdisciplinary scoping review
75.
Jeffrey Lambert (University of Exeter Medical School)
A wed-delivered intervention for depression combining Behavioural Activation with physical activity promotion:
study protocol for a pilot randomised control trial
76.
Abi Fisher (University College London)
Innerselfie: can we use Immersive Virtual Reality to change cancer risk perceptions and promote physical activity
in young people
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