F
Ffion Lloyd-Williams
Researcher at University of Liverpool
Publications - 65
Citations - 2117
Ffion Lloyd-Williams is an academic researcher from University of Liverpool. The author has contributed to research in topics: Public health & Population. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 64 publications receiving 1766 citations. Previous affiliations of Ffion Lloyd-Williams include Health Science University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
The use of research evidence in public health decision making processes: systematic review.
TL;DR: To more effectively implement research informed public health policy, action is required by decision makers and researchers to address the barriers identified in this systematic review.
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Are interventions to promote healthy eating equally effective for all? Systematic review of socioeconomic inequalities in impact
Rory McGill,Elspeth Anwar,Lois Orton,Helen Bromley,Ffion Lloyd-Williams,Martin O'Flaherty,David Taylor-Robinson,Maria Guzman-Castillo,Duncan Gillespie,Patrícia Vasconcelos Leitão Moreira,Kirk Allen,Lirije Hyseni,Nicola Calder,Mark Petticrew,Martin White,Martin White,Margaret Whitehead,Simon Capewell +17 more
TL;DR: Interventions categorised by a “6 Ps” framework show differential effects on healthy eating outcomes by SEP, and “Upstream” interventions categorised as “Price” appeared to decrease inequalities, and“downstream’ “Person�" interventions seemed to increase inequalities.
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Systematic review of dietary salt reduction policies: Evidence for an effectiveness hierarchy?
Lirije Hyseni,Alex Elliot-Green,Ffion Lloyd-Williams,Chris Kypridemos,Martin O'Flaherty,Rory McGill,Lois Orton,Helen Bromley,Francesco P. Cappuccio,Simon Capewell +9 more
TL;DR: Comprehensive strategies involving multiple components (reformulation, food labelling and media campaigns) and “upstream” population-wide policies such as mandatory reformulation generally appear to achieve larger reductions in population- wide salt consumption than “downstream’, individually focussed interventions.
Journal ArticleDOI
The effects of policy actions to improve population dietary patterns and prevent diet-related non-communicable diseases: scoping review.
Lirije Hyseni,M Atkinson,Helen Bromley,Lois Orton,Ffion Lloyd-Williams,Rory McGill,Simon Capewell +6 more
TL;DR: Increasingly strong evidence is highlighting potentially powerful policies to improve diet and thus prevent NCDs, notably multi-component interventions, taxes, subsidies, elimination and perhaps trade agreements.
Journal ArticleDOI
Estimating the cardiovascular mortality burden attributable to the European Common Agricultural Policy on dietary saturated fats
Ffion Lloyd-Williams,Martin O'Flaherty,Modi Mwatsama,Christopher Birt,Robin Ireland,Simon Capewell +5 more
TL;DR: The cardiovascular disease burden attributable to CAP appears substantial, and the true mortality burden may be higher, as these calculations were conservative estimates, but the reported mortality estimates should be considered in relation to the current CAP and any future reforms.