
Ella Graham-RoweOPEN Health HEOR & market access · Patient engagement
Ella Graham-Rowe
PhD
About
13
Publications
11,634
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Introduction
Additional affiliations
February 2018 - present
September 2015 - June 2017
January 2009 - January 2011
Education
January 2011
October 2006 - September 2008
September 1994 - June 1997
Publications
Publications (13)
Violence prevention programs aim to raise awareness, change attitudes, normative beliefs, motivation, and behavioral responses. Many programs have been developed and evaluated, and optimistic claims about effectiveness made. Yet comprehensive guidance on program design, implementation, and evaluation is limited. The aim of this study was to provide...
Household food waste has a significant detrimental impact on the environment. However, despite national campaigns, people in high income countries throw away a sizeable proportion of the food they purchase. The present study investigated whether self-affirmation could promote openness to information detailing the negative consequences of household...
Aims
To identify and synthesize studies reporting modifiable barriers/enablers associated with retinopathy screening attendance in people with Type 1 or Type 2 diabetes, and to identify those most likely to influence attendance.
Methods
We searched MEDLINE, EMBASE, PsycINFO, Cochrane Library and the ‘grey literature’ for quantitative and qualitati...
Background
Diabetic retinopathy screening (DRS) is effective but uptake is suboptimal.
Objectives
To determine the effectiveness of quality improvement (QI) interventions for DRS attendance; describe the interventions in terms of QI components and behaviour change techniques (BCTs); identify theoretical determinants of attendance; investigate cohe...
Background:
Despite evidence supporting the effectiveness of diabetic retinopathy screening (DRS) in reducing the risk of sight loss, attendance for screening is consistently below recommended levels.
Objectives:
The primary objective of the review was to assess the effectiveness of quality improvement (QI) interventions that seek to increase at...
Purpose
Study objectives were to: 1) determine the effectiveness of interventions to improve diabetic retinopathy screening (DRS) attendance; 2) specify intervention content in terms of behaviour change techniques (BCTs); 3) determine whether interventions that included particular BCTs were more effective in increasing attendance.
Methods
We searc...
Background:
Diabetic retinopathy is a serious complication of diabetes which, if left untreated, can result in blindness. Population screening among people with diabetes has been shown to be clinically effective; however, suboptimal attendance with wide demographic disparities has been reported. To develop quality improvement interventions to maxi...
This is the protocol for a review and there is no abstract. The objectives are as follows: The primary objective of the review is to assess the effectiveness of intervention components that seek to increase attendance for diabetic retinopathy screening in people with type 1 and type 2 diabetes. Secondary objectives: To use validated taxonomies of Q...
Identifying the antecedents of household food waste reduction is an important step in the development of effective and efficient interventions. This prospective study tested the utility of applying an extended theory of planned behaviour (TPB) model to household food waste reduction. At baseline, participants (N = 279) completed a questionnaire des...
The amount of food discarded by UK households is substantial and, to a large extent, avoidable. Furthermore, such food waste has serious environmental consequences. If household food waste reduction initiatives are to be successful they will need to be informed by people's motivations and barriers to minimising household food waste. This paper repo...
Transport accounts for nearly a quarter of current energy-related carbon dioxide emissions with car travel constituting more than three quarters of all vehicle kilometres travelled. Interventions to change transport behaviour, and especially to reduce car use, could reduce CO2 emissions from road transport more quickly than technological measures....
Worksite interventions have the potential to reach a broad and captive audience and overcome one of the most widely cited barriers to increasing physical activity (PA), namely, a lack of time. A systematic review and random effects, meta-analysis assessed the effectiveness of worksite interventions to enhance PA. Thirty-seven intervention evaluatio...