B
Barbara Mullan
Researcher at Curtin University
Publications - 232
Citations - 8001
Barbara Mullan is an academic researcher from Curtin University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Psychological intervention & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 46, co-authored 201 publications receiving 6345 citations. Previous affiliations of Barbara Mullan include RMIT University & University of Western Australia.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Does inhibitory control training improve health behaviour? A meta-analysis.
TL;DR: Results suggest that GNG inhibitory control training paradigms can influence health behaviour, but perhaps only in the short-term.
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Cancer Patient Disclosure and Patient-Doctor Communication of Complementary and Alternative Medicine Use: A Systematic Review
Esther L Davis,Byeongsang Oh,Byeongsang Oh,Byeongsang Oh,Phyllis Butow,Barbara Mullan,Stephen Clarke +6 more
TL;DR: Although the use of CAM by patients with cancer is high, patients frequently fail to disclose its use to their health professionals for reasons emanating from both sides of the dyadic patient-doctor relationship.
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An examination of the demographic predictors of adolescent breakfast consumption, content, and context
Barbara Mullan,Barbara Mullan,Cara Wong,Emily Kothe,Kathleen O’Moore,Kristen Pickles,Kirby Sainsbury,Kirby Sainsbury +7 more
TL;DR: This study provides a comprehensive examination of the factors underlying breakfast consumption (content and context) and has important implications for the development of evidence-based interventions to improve rates of breakfast consumption and the quality of food consumed amongst adolescents.
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Impact of Medical Qigong on quality of life, fatigue, mood and inflammation in cancer patients: a randomized controlled trial
Byeongsang Oh,Byeongsang Oh,Phyllis Butow,Barbara Mullan,Stephen Clarke,Philip Beale,Nick Pavlakis,Nick Pavlakis,Emily Kothe,L. Lam,David S. Rosenthal +10 more
TL;DR: It is indicated that MQ can improve cancer patients’ overall QOL and mood status and reduce specific side-effects of treatment and may also produce physical benefits in the long term through reduced inflammation.
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Theory of planned behavior and adherence in chronic illness: a meta-analysis
TL;DR: Although results support theory predictions, effect sizes were small, particularly for the intention-behavior relationship, and the theory explained 33 and 9% of the variance in intention and adherence behavior respectively.