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D. Bonetti

Researcher at University of St Andrews

Publications -  8
Citations -  1135

D. Bonetti is an academic researcher from University of St Andrews. The author has contributed to research in topics: Randomized controlled trial & Psychological intervention. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 8 publications receiving 1071 citations. Previous affiliations of D. Bonetti include University of Aberdeen.

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Application of the Theory of Planned Behaviour in Behaviour Change Interventions: A Systematic Review

TL;DR: The TPB may have potential for developing behaviour change interventions, but more comprehensive studies are needed that compare the utility of the TPB with other social cognition models and behavioural techniques.
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How to Influence Patient Oral Hygiene Behavior Effectively

TL;DR: Results showed that patients who experienced the intervention had better behavioral, cognitive, and clinical outcomes, but clinical outcomes were significantly better only in the Cluster RCT, suggesting that the impact of trial design on results needs to be further explored.
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Dimensions of perceived control: A factor analysis of three measures and an examination of their relation to activity level and mood in a student and cross-cultural patient sample

TL;DR: This paper investigated whether measures of three perceived control concepts tapped independent dimensions, were invariant to population characteristics of health and culture, were differentially sensitive to health outcomes, and were discriminable from self-report disability.
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Can psychological models bridge the gap between clinical guidelines and clinicians' behaviour? A randomised controlled trial of an intervention to influence dentists' intention to implement evidence-based practice.

TL;DR: Results suggest this intervention, which successfully influenced a proximal predictor of behaviour pertinent to dental EBP, may result in improved EBP in a service-level trial.
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Effectiveness of strategies to disseminate and implement clinical guidelines for the management of impacted and unerupted third molars in primary dental care, a cluster randomised controlled trial.

TL;DR: In an environment in which pre-intervention compliance was unexpectedly high, neither CAL nor A and F increased the dentists' compliance with the SIGN guideline compared with mailing of the guideline and the opportunity to attend a postgraduate course.