R
Rona Campbell
Researcher at University of Bristol
Publications - 247
Citations - 14510
Rona Campbell is an academic researcher from University of Bristol. The author has contributed to research in topics: Psychological intervention & Randomized controlled trial. The author has an hindex of 54, co-authored 231 publications receiving 12300 citations. Previous affiliations of Rona Campbell include Cardiff University.
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What is best practice in sex and relationship education? A synthesis of evidence, including stakeholders' views.
Pandora Pound,Sarah Denford,Janet Shucksmith,Clare Tanton,Anne M Johnson,Jenny Owen,Rebecca Hutten,Leanne Mohan,Chris Bonell,Charles Abraham,Rona Campbell +10 more
TL;DR: The findings indicate that school-based SRE and school-linked sexual health services can be effective at improving sexual health and key features of effective and acceptable SRE are identified.
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Factors influencing hand washing behaviour in primary schools: process evaluation within a randomized controlled trial
TL;DR: Factors that may influence hand washing behaviour among pupils and staff in primary schools are explored, including having time to wash hands using accessible, clean facilities, and being encouraged through the existence of hand washing opportunities in the daily routine.
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Meeting the challenges of implementing process evaluation within randomized controlled trials : the example of ASSIST (A Stop Smoking in Schools Trial)
TL;DR: The extensive process evaluation embedded within the ASSIST trial is described and the potential for such detailed examination of process to affect the intervention's delivery, receipt and outcome evaluation is considered.
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Adolescent perspectives on wearing accelerometers to measure physical activity in population-based trials.
TL;DR: If worn properly, accelerometers can provide an important objective measure of physical activity in population-based studies promoting physical activity, but to achieve generalizable results, it is important to maximize recruitment, retention and adherence to protocol across the study population.
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Patients' perspectives on foot complications in type 2 diabetes: a qualitative study
TL;DR: Patients with type 2 diabetes may have beliefs about foot complications that differ from medical evidence that play a role in foot-related behaviours that have previously been unrecognised and health professionals need to address the beliefs underlying patients' foot self-care practices.