© 2013 The Authors. Sociology of Health & Illness © 2013 Foundation for the Sociology of Health & Illness/John Wiley & Sons LtdIncreasing rates of chronic conditions have resulted in governments targeting health behaviour such as smoking, eating high‐fat diets, or physical inactivity known to increase risk for these conditions. In the process, many have become preoccupied with disease prevention policies focused excessively and narrowly on behavioural health‐promotion strategies. These aim to improve health status by persuading individuals to change their health behaviour. At the same time, health promotion policy often fails to incorporate an understanding of the social determinants of health, which recognises that health behaviour itself ...
AbstractObjectiveTo demonstrate that six common errors made in attempts to change behaviour have pre...
Key messages The 2020 Marmot Review showed that health inequalities in England have widened since ...
The evidence about the effectiveness of behaviour change approaches—what works and what does not wor...
There have been calls for some time for a new approach to public health in the United Kingdom and be...
Most countries worldwide have recognised the significance of contextual social determinants of healt...
Objective: to demonstrate that six common errors made in attempts to change behaviour have prevented...
Although extensive research shows that the social determinants of health influence the distribution ...
Health inequalities caused by socioeconomic factors violate social justice principle. Therefore, pol...
Health inequalities have been observed internationally across a number of dimensions (including, eg,...
Needs, norms and nudges: the place of behaviour change in health promotion Health promotion has alwa...
AbstractObjectiveTo demonstrate that six common errors made in attempts to change behaviour have pre...
Health inequalities have been observed internationally across a number of dimensions (including, eg,...
Health inequalities have been observed internationally across a number of dimensions (including, eg,...
Copyright © 2006 Australian Health ReviewThere is now unequivocal evidence that the health status of...
The public health policies are principally implemented using two main strategies, namely, the popula...
AbstractObjectiveTo demonstrate that six common errors made in attempts to change behaviour have pre...
Key messages The 2020 Marmot Review showed that health inequalities in England have widened since ...
The evidence about the effectiveness of behaviour change approaches—what works and what does not wor...
There have been calls for some time for a new approach to public health in the United Kingdom and be...
Most countries worldwide have recognised the significance of contextual social determinants of healt...
Objective: to demonstrate that six common errors made in attempts to change behaviour have prevented...
Although extensive research shows that the social determinants of health influence the distribution ...
Health inequalities caused by socioeconomic factors violate social justice principle. Therefore, pol...
Health inequalities have been observed internationally across a number of dimensions (including, eg,...
Needs, norms and nudges: the place of behaviour change in health promotion Health promotion has alwa...
AbstractObjectiveTo demonstrate that six common errors made in attempts to change behaviour have pre...
Health inequalities have been observed internationally across a number of dimensions (including, eg,...
Health inequalities have been observed internationally across a number of dimensions (including, eg,...
Copyright © 2006 Australian Health ReviewThere is now unequivocal evidence that the health status of...
The public health policies are principally implemented using two main strategies, namely, the popula...
AbstractObjectiveTo demonstrate that six common errors made in attempts to change behaviour have pre...
Key messages The 2020 Marmot Review showed that health inequalities in England have widened since ...
The evidence about the effectiveness of behaviour change approaches—what works and what does not wor...