scholarly article | Q13442814 |
P356 | DOI | 10.1017/S1744133114000413 |
P698 | PubMed publication ID | 25348049 |
P50 | author | Flora Douglas | Q57318022 |
Lorna Aucott | Q117750759 | ||
Deokhee Yi | Q37830177 | ||
Edwin R van Teijlingen | Q39940928 | ||
P2093 | author name string | Alison Avenell | |
Luke Vale | |||
Mandy Ryan | |||
P2860 | cites work | Increased food energy supply is more than sufficient to explain the US epidemic of obesity. | Q51784918 |
‘Ask Me Why I'm Fat!’ The Need to Engage with Potential Recipients of Health Promotion Policy to Prevent Obesity | Q57468675 | ||
Deleting ‘irrational’ responses from discrete choice experiments: a case of investigating or imposing preferences? | Q61439754 | ||
Mistakes were made: misperception as a barrier to reducing overweight | Q73563415 | ||
Thicker paper and larger font increased response and completeness in a postal survey | Q79688788 | ||
Changing perceptions of weight in Great Britain: comparison of two population surveys | Q22242085 | ||
You are what you eat: within-subject increases in fruit and vegetable consumption confer beneficial skin-color changes | Q28261800 | ||
Adiposity and weight change in mid-life in relation to healthy survival after age 70 in women: prospective cohort study | Q35591321 | ||
Systematic review of the long-term effects and economic consequences of treatments for obesity and implications for health improvement | Q35775414 | ||
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Factors associated with misperception of weight in the stroke belt. | Q36608172 | ||
Influences of weight loss on long-term diabetes outcomes | Q37072014 | ||
Long-term weight loss from lifestyle intervention benefits blood pressure?: a systematic review | Q37585963 | ||
Systematic review of long-term lifestyle interventions to prevent weight gain and morbidity in adults. | Q37597501 | ||
Effects of lifestyle interventions and long-term weight loss on lipid outcomes - a systematic review | Q37849342 | ||
Discrete choice experiments in health economics: a review of the literature | Q37973704 | ||
Physical activity energy expenditure has not declined since the 1980s and matches energy expenditures of wild mammals | Q40087774 | ||
'Irrational' stated preferences: a quantitative and qualitative investigation. | Q40480521 | ||
Validity of self-reported height and weight in 4808 EPIC-Oxford participants | Q47179229 | ||
Valuing the benefits of weight loss programs: an application of the discrete choice experiment | Q47408672 | ||
Women smokers' experiences of an age-appearance anti-smoking intervention: a qualitative study. | Q48161932 | ||
Individual preferences for diet and exercise programmes: changes over a lifestyle intervention and their link with outcomes | Q48264303 | ||
More of the same? Conflicting perspectives of obesity causation and intervention amongst overweight people, health professionals and policy makers | Q50147750 | ||
Rationalising the 'irrational': a think aloud study of discrete choice experiment responses. | Q51443904 | ||
P433 | issue | 2 | |
P921 | main subject | obesity | Q12174 |
P304 | page(s) | 161-182 | |
P577 | publication date | 2014-10-28 | |
P1433 | published in | Health Economics, Policy and Law | Q15766164 |
P1476 | title | Gaining pounds by losing pounds: preferences for lifestyle interventions to reduce obesity | |
P478 | volume | 10 |
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Q87945128 | Incorporating Quantitative Patient Preference Data into Healthcare Decision Making Processes: Is HTA Falling Behind? |
Q64239387 | Pilot randomised controlled trial of Weight Watchers® referral with or without dietitian-led group support for weight loss in women treated for breast cancer: the BRIGHT (BReast cancer weIGHT loss) trial |
Q47109355 | The Promise of Tailoring Incentives for Healthy Behaviors |
Q47762794 | The eyes have it: Using eye tracking to inform information processing strategies in multi-attributes choices. |
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