2014
DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-14-563
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A theory-based online health behaviour intervention for new university students (U@Uni): results from a randomised controlled trial

Abstract: BackgroundToo few young people engage in behaviours that reduce the risk of morbidity and premature mortality, such as eating healthily, being physically active, drinking sensibly and not smoking. This study sought to assess the efficacy and cost-effectiveness of a theory-based online health behaviour intervention (based on self-affirmation theory, the Theory of Planned Behaviour and implementation intentions) targeting these behaviours in new university students, in comparison to a measurement-only control.Me… Show more

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Cited by 76 publications
(180 citation statements)
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“…Second, as young adults need long-term processes to establish PA behaviors as habits, the 4-week Web-based intervention dose might not have been sufficient to change their PA habits. The same issue can also be found in another Web-based PA intervention among university students [38]. Third, measuring PA after 8 weeks might have been a too-distal measurement point, as PA was addressed only throughout the first 4 weeks.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…Second, as young adults need long-term processes to establish PA behaviors as habits, the 4-week Web-based intervention dose might not have been sufficient to change their PA habits. The same issue can also be found in another Web-based PA intervention among university students [38]. Third, measuring PA after 8 weeks might have been a too-distal measurement point, as PA was addressed only throughout the first 4 weeks.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…To identify the key beliefs regarding mothers' decision-making, similar procedures outlined by von Haeften, Fishbein, Kasprzyk, and Montano (2001) and utilised in a number of TPB belief-based studies (e.g., Cowie & Hamilton, 2014;Epton et al, 2014), were employed. First, Pearson product-moment correlation matrixes were utilised to identify the beliefs that significantly correlated with intentions and behaviour.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It has been utilized to evaluate various health‐related behaviour change interventions including breastfeeding, healthy eating and physical activity . Recently, it has been also used to evaluate the influence of e‐learning interventions including medication safety, university student health behaviours, sun safety and breakfast consumption . Despite its predictive potential, there has been no published research to date using the TPB in the context of investigating the barriers and facilitators of CKD screening practices in the GP setting.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%