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Cassandra J. C. Wright

Researcher at La Trobe University

Publications -  57
Citations -  729

Cassandra J. C. Wright is an academic researcher from La Trobe University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Psychological intervention. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 43 publications receiving 421 citations. Previous affiliations of Cassandra J. C. Wright include Burnet Institute & Monash University.

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Purchasing, consumption, demographic and socioeconomic variables associated with shifts in alcohol consumption during the COVID-19 pandemic.

TL;DR: A reported increase in consumption among those experiencing more stress suggests that some people may have been drinking to cope during the epidemic, and the reported decrease among those who drank more outside of their home in 2019 suggests that closing all on-trade sales did not result in complete substitution of on-premise drinking with home drinking.
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The contexts of heavy drinking: A systematic review of the combinations of context-related factors associated with heavy drinking occasions.

TL;DR: Contexts or factors are experienced in specific sequences that shape the broader drinking context and influence drinking behaviours and consequences but are under-studied and can harness new technologies for data collection and analysis to improve understandings of why people engage in heavy drinking.
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Reach, engagement, and effectiveness: a systematic review of evaluation methodologies used in health promotion via social networking sites

TL;DR: Through use of quasi-experimental or well designed before-after evaluations, in combination with detailed engagement metrics, it is possible to balance assessment of effectiveness and reach to evaluate SNS health promotion.
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Mobile Phone-Based Ecological Momentary Intervention to Reduce Young Adults' Alcohol Use in the Event: A Three-Armed Randomized Controlled Trial.

TL;DR: With a small number of participants, this study showed few effects of an SMS-based brief intervention on peak risky single-occasion drinking, and highlights areas for further investigation into the effects of EMI on young adults with heavy alcohol consumption.