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    Chapter

    An Ecological Model for Understanding and Influencing Sedentary Behaviour

    With the evidence that time spent sitting can have adverse health consequences, a research priority is to build the requisite knowledge base for effective interventions—that is, what needs to be changed in ord...

    Nyssa Hadgraft, David Dunstan, Neville Owen in Sedentary Behaviour Epidemiology (2023)

  2. Article

    Open Access

    Stand More AT Work (SMArT Work): using the behaviour change wheel to develop an intervention to reduce sitting time in the workplace

    Sitting (sedentary behaviour) is widespread among desk-based office workers and a high level of sedentary behaviour is a risk factor for poor health. Reducing workplace sitting time is therefore an important p...

    Fehmidah Munir, Stuart J. H. Biddle, Melanie J. Davies, David Dunstan in BMC Public Health (2018)

  3. Article

    Open Access

    Too much sitting and all-cause mortality: is there a causal link?

    Sedentary behaviours (time spent sitting, with low energy expenditure) are associated with deleterious health outcomes, including all-cause mortality. Whether this association can be considered causal has yet ...

    Stuart J. H. Biddle, Jason A. Bennie, Adrian E. Bauman in BMC Public Health (2016)