S
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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Journal ArticleDOI
Can Television Influence Smoking? Further Evidence
TL;DR: It is concluded that television may be a useful medium for health education on the smoking issue because smokers tended to watch approximately 25% more television programmes per week than those who had never smoked.
Journal ArticleDOI
Reducing bias in trials due to reactions to measurement: experts produced recommendations informed by evidence
David P. French,Lisa M Miles,Diana Elbourne,Andrew Farmer,Martin Gulliford,Louise Locock,Stephen Sutton,Jim McCambridge +7 more
TL;DR: The MERIT study as discussed by the authors aimed to produce recommendations on how best to minimize bias from measurement reactivity (MR) in randomized controlled trials of interventions to improve health by measuring participants' health-related behaviors, relative to no-measurement controls.
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E-cigarette adverts and children's perceptions of tobacco smoking harms: an experimental study and meta-analysis.
Milica Vasiljevic,Amelia St John Wallis,Saphsa Codling,Dominique-Laurent Couturier,Stephen Sutton,Theresa M. Marteau +5 more
TL;DR: This study adds to existing evidence that exposure to e-cigarette adverts reduces children’s perceptions of the harm of occasional tobacco smoking by establishing whether the effect found in prior research is robust and replicable using a larger sample and a stronger control condition.
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Evaluation of a very brief pedometer-based physical activity intervention delivered in NHS Health Checks in England: The VBI randomised controlled trial.
Wendy Hardeman,Joanna Mitchell,Sally Pears,Miranda Van Emmenis,Florence Theil,Vijay Gc,Vijay Gc,Joana C. Vasconcelos,Kate Westgate,Soren Brage,Marc Suhrcke,Simon J. Griffin,Ann Louise Kinmonth,Edward C. F. Wilson,A Toby Prevost,Stephen Sutton +15 more
TL;DR: No evidence of effect of a plausible very brief pedometer-based intervention embedded in NHS Health Checks on objectively measured activity at 3-month follow-up is found in this large well-conducted trial.
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Can informed choice invitations lead to inequities in intentions to make lifestyle changes among participants in a primary care diabetes screening programme? Evidence from a randomized trial
TL;DR: Efforts to enhance informed choice where the implications of diagnosis are a requirement for lifestyle change may require that the immediate benefits are communicated, and efforts to address the apparent barriers to diabetes self-care are made, if the potential for inequity is to be avoided.