| Mammography / Cancer
Screening Campbell E, Rogers J, et al.
Encouraging underscreened women to have cervical cancer screening: the effectiveness of a
computer strategy. Prev Med. 1997; 26(6): 801-7.
Champion V, Huster G. Effect of interventions on stage of
mammography adoption. J Behav Med. 1995; 18(2): 169-87.
Mayer-Oakes SA, Schweitzer SO, et al. Mammography use in
older women with regular physicians: what are the predictors? Am J Prev Med. 1996; 12(1):
44-50.
Rakowski W, Woolverton H, et al. Integrating pros and cons
for mammography and Pap testing: extending the construct of decisional balance to two
behaviors. Prev Med. 1997; 26(5 pt. 1): 664-73
Rakowski W, Dube CE, et al. Assessing Elements of
Womens Decisions About Mammography. Health Psychology. 1992; 11(2): 111-118.
Savage SA, Clarke VA. Factors associated with screening
mammography and breast-self examination intentions. Health Educ Res. 1996; 11(4): 409-21.
Scammon DL, Beard T. The role of "free"
mammograms in motivating first-time screening: a community experiment. J Ambul Care Mark.
1995; 6(1): 59-71.
Strickland CJ, Meyskens FL, et al. Improving breast
self-examination compliance: a Southwest Oncology Group randomized trial of three
interventions. Prev Med. 1997; 26(3): 320-32.
Worden JK, Mickey RM, et al. Development of a Community
Breast Screening Promotion Program Using Baseline Data. Preventive Medicine 1994; 23:
267-75.
Smoking/ Substance Abuse Prevention and Treatment
Lando HA, Hellerstedt WL, et al. Results of a
long-term community smoking cessation contest. Am J Health Promot. 1991; 5(6): 420-5.
Popham WJ, Potter LD, et al. Effectiveness of the
California 1990-1991 Tobacco Education Media Campaign. Am J Prev Med. 1994; 10(6):
319-326.
Popham WJ, Potter LD, et al. Do Anti-Smoking Media
Campaigns Help Smokers Quit? Public Health Reports. 1993; 180(4): 510 513.
Prochaska JO, DiClemente CC, Norcross JC. In Search of How
People Change: Applications to Addictive Behaviors. American Psychologist. 1992; 47(9):
1102-1114.
Werch CE, DiClemente CC. A multi-component stage model for
matching drug prevention strategies and messages to youth stage of use. Health Educ Res.
1994; 9(1): 37-46.
Obesity / Physical Activity
Calfas KJ, French M, et al. Mediators of change in
physical activity following an intervention in primary care: PACE. Prev Med. 1997; 26(3):
297-304.
Cardinal BJ. Development and evaluation of stage-matched
written materials about lifestyle and structured physical activity, Percept Mot Skills,
Apr-95, 80, 2, 543-6
Cardinal The stages of exercise scale and the stages of
exercise behavior in female adults. J Sports Med Phys Fitness. 1995; 35(2): 87-92.
Fontaine KR, Cheskin LJ. Self-efficacy, attendance, and
weight loss in obesity treatment. Addict Behav. 1997; 22(4): 567-70.
Laitakari J, Oja P, et al. Is long-term maintenance of
health-related physical activity possible? An analysis of concepts and evidence. Health
Educ Res. 1996; 11(4): 463-77.
Marcus BH, Dube CE, et al. Training physicians to conduct
physical activity counseling. Prev Med. 1997; 26(3): 382-8.
Marcus BH, Selby VC, et al. Self-efficacy and the Stages
of Exercise Behavior Change. Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport. 1992; 63(1):
60-66.
Marcus BH, Simkin LR. The transtheoretical model:
applications to exercise behavior. Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise. 1994;
26(11): 1400-1404.
Potvin L, Nguyen NM, et al. Prevalence of stages of change
for physical activity in rural, suburban, and inner-city communities. J Community Health
1997; 22(1): 1-13.
Sellers DE, Crawford SL, et al. Understanding the
variability in the effectiveness of community heart health program: A meta-analysis. Soc.
Sci. Med. 1997; 44(9): 1325-1339.
Stone EJ. Can School Health Education Programs Make a
Difference? Preventive Medicine 1996; 25: 54-55.
Occupational Health
Jeffrey RW, Kelder SH, et al. An empirical evaluation
of the effectiveness of tangible incentives in increasing participation and behavior
change in a worksite health promotion program. Am J Health Promot. 1993; 8(2): 98-100.
Kurtz JR, Schork MA, et al. An evaluation of peer and
professional trainers in a union-based occupational health and safety training program. J
Occup Environ Med. 1997; 39(7): 661-71.
Zwerling C, Daltroy LH, et al. Design and Conduct of
Occupational Injury Intervention Studies: A Review of Evaluation Strategies. American
Journal of Industrial Medicine. 1997; 32: 164-179.
Other Health Behavior Activity Evaluations
Forst M, Jang M, et al. Issues in the evaluation of
AIDS education programs. The case of California. Eval Health Prof. 1990; 13(2): 147-67.
Guiffrida A, Torgerson DJ. Should we pay the patient?
Review of financial incentives to enhance patient compliance. BMJ 1997; 315(7110): 703-7.
Nonis SA, Hudson G, et al. College student's blood
donation behavior: relationships to demographics, perceived risk and incentives. Health
Mark Q. 1996; 13(4): 33-46.
Pinch WJ, Barr P, et al. Implementation of the Patient
Self-Determination Act: a survey of Nebraska hospitals. Res Nurs Health 1995; 18(1):
59-66.
Sellers DE, McKinlay JB, et al. Understanding the
variability in the effectiveness of community heart health programs: a meta-analysis. Soc
Sci Med. 1997; 44(9): 1325-39.
Stone EJ. Can school health education programs make a
difference? Prev Med. 1996; 25(1): 54-5.
Volmink J, Garner P. Systematic review of randomized
controlled trials of strategies to promote adherence to tuberculosis treatment. BMJ 1997;
315(7120): 1403-6.
Evaluation Methods
Green SB, Lynn WR, et al. Interplay between design and
analysis for behavioral intervention trials with community as the unit of randomization.
Am J Epidemiol 1995; 142(6): 587-93.
Green, SB. The advantages of community-randomized trials
for evaluating lifestyle modification. Control Clin Trials. 1997; 18(6): 506-13.
Rodes F, Reis J, et al. Using behavioral theory in
computer-based health promotion and appraisal. Health Educ Behav. 1997; 24(1): 20-34.
Hanson CL, Kolterman OG, et al. Empirical validation for a
family-centered model of care. Diabetes Care 1995; 18(10): 1347-56.
Stampfer, M. Observational epidemiology is the preferred
means of evaluating effects of behavioral and lifestyle modification. Control Clin Trials
1997; 18(6): 494 - 9.
Terrin, ML. Individual subject random assignment is the
preferred means of evaluating behavioral lifestyle modification. Control Clin Trials 1997;
18(6): 500-5, 514-6.
Velicer WF, Prochaska JO. A criterion measurement model
for health behavior change. Addict Behav. 1996; 21(5): 555-84. |