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Stephen Sutton

Researcher at University of Cambridge

Publications -  421
Citations -  23035

Stephen Sutton is an academic researcher from University of Cambridge. The author has contributed to research in topics: Randomized controlled trial & Smoking cessation. The author has an hindex of 70, co-authored 412 publications receiving 20781 citations. Previous affiliations of Stephen Sutton include Cooperative Research Centre & James Cook University.

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Why does genetic causal information alter perceived treatment effectiveness? An analogue study.

TL;DR: The impact of genetic causal information on perceived effectiveness of treatments varies with type of health problem, but these effects are small and unlikely to translate into clinically meaningful differences in health-enhancing behaviours.
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Republished research: Effectiveness of physical activity promotion based in primary care: systematic review and meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials

TL;DR: Tests of physical activity promotion based in primary care show positive effects on physical activity levels, but not on fitness, over at least 12 months; however, not enough evidence exists to indicate whether exercise referral is more effective than other primary care interventions.
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Stroke survivors’, caregivers’ and GPs’ attitudes towards a Polypill for the secondary prevention of stroke: A qualitative interview study

TL;DR: Stroke/TIA survivors were positive about the polypill concept and considered it acceptable in the secondary prevention of stroke, and GPs were open to prescribing it to those at increased cardiovascular risk.
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An exploration of the missing data mechanism in an Internet based smoking cessation trial

TL;DR: Those conducting smoking cessation trials, and wishing to perform an analysis that assumes the data are MAR, should collect and incorporate baseline variables into their models that are thought to be good predictors of missing data in order to make this assumption more plausible.
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Device-assessed total and prolonged sitting time: associations with anxiety, depression, and health-related quality of life in adults

TL;DR: Device-based measures of both total and prolonged sitting time were associated with depression and health-related quality of life, but not anxiety, and MVPA was associated with better HRQoL health state and utility scores.