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Follow-up Of Healthy Lifestyles Intervention For Cardivascular Disease Among People With A Psychotic Disorder
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$451,536.00
Summary
Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is the largest single natural cause of death among people with severe mental disorders. The majority of people with severe mental disorders smoke and obesity, related to inactivity and unhealthy diets, is common. The proposed study is seeking funding for long term follow-up of people recruited into a 2009 NHMRC funded trial of a healthy lifestyle intervention to promote smoking cessation and reduce CVD risk behaviours among people with severe mental disorders.
Planning, Timing And Quit Success: A Randomised Controlled Trial
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$448,108.00
Summary
The aim of this project is to better understand how quit smoking interventions should be structured to maximise effectiveness; should smokers be encouraged to quit immediately to capitalize on the motivation that caused them to seek help, or first spend time planning, and can the planning be done after quitting? The answers will inform the design and delivery of smoking cessation programs, and potentially programs for other hard-to-change behaviours.
Maximising The Effectiveness Of Interactive Automated Programs For Smoking Cessation
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$922,582.00
Summary
This project is to design, implement and trial automated programs to help smokers quit. It makes use of the powers of modern computing and telecommunications. It uses information the person provides to personally tailor advice and assistance to smokers as they progress from beginning to think about quitting through to being a stable, happy non-smoker. In particular, we are interested in the relative value of detailed advice as compared with the capacity of modern messaging technology (SMS, voice ....This project is to design, implement and trial automated programs to help smokers quit. It makes use of the powers of modern computing and telecommunications. It uses information the person provides to personally tailor advice and assistance to smokers as they progress from beginning to think about quitting through to being a stable, happy non-smoker. In particular, we are interested in the relative value of detailed advice as compared with the capacity of modern messaging technology (SMS, voice, images) to provide a set of prompts and reminders that help smokers manage a quit attempt and help prevent them relapsing back to smoking. Once we have developed the interventions, we will subject them to a rigorous scientific trial to see how effective they are and also how cost-effective they prove. Our hope is that these programs will provide a cheap, accessible and effective way of helping smokers to quit and thus help reduce the huge toll of smoking-related disease.Read moreRead less