28 results on '"Åsberg K"'
Search Results
2. MANAGEMENT AND OUTCOME OF ACUTE STROKE, A STUDY OF 105,043 PATIENTS REPORTED TO THE SWEDISH NATIONAL QUALITY REGISTER FOR STROKE CARE (RIKS-STROKE): 3
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Terént, A., Åsberg, S., Henriksson, K., Farahmand, B., Asplund, K., Norrving, B., Stegmayr, B., Wester, P. O., and Åsberg, K. Hulter
- Published
- 2008
3. MANAGEMENT AND OUTCOME OF ACUTE STROKE, A STUDY OF 105 043 PATIENTS REPORTED TO THE SWEDISH NATIONAL QUALITY REGISTER FOR STROKE CARE (RIKS-STROKE): 11
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Terént, A., åsberg, S., Henriksson, K., Farahmand, B., Asplund, K., Norrving, B., Stegmayr, B., Wester, P. O., and åsberg, K. Hulter
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- 2008
4. ADHERENCE TO SECONDARY PREVENTION ONE YEAR AFTER STROKE. A NATION-WIDE FOLLOW-UP STUDY: 1
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Glader, F., Lundberg, M., Eriksson, M., Åsberg, K. Hulter, Norrving, B., Stegmayr, B., Terént, A., and Asplund, K.
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- 2008
5. RISK FACTORS FOR CEREBRAL INFARCTION, A STUDY OF 66 610 PATIENTS REPORTED TO THE SWEDISH NATIONAL QUALITY REGISTER FOR STROKE CARE (RIKS-STROKE): 1
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Åsberg, S., Henriksson, K., Farahmand, B., Asplund, K., Norrving, B., Stegmayr, B., Wester, P. O., Åsberg, K. Hulter, and Terént, A.
- Published
- 2008
6. Large variations in the use of oral anticoagulants in stroke patients with atrial fibrillation: a Swedish national perspective
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GLADER, E.-L., STEGMAYR, B., NORRVING, B., TERÉNT, A., HULTER-ÅSBERG, K., WESTER, P.-O., and ASPLUND, K.
- Published
- 2004
7. Sex differences in management and outcome after stroke: a Swedish national perspective.
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Glader E, Stegmayr B, Norrving B, Terént A, Hulter-Åsberg K, Wester P, Asplund K, Riks-Stroke Collaboration, Glader, Eva-Lotta, Stegmayr, Birgitta, Norrving, Bo, Terént, Andreas, Hulter-Asberg, Kerstin, Wester, Per-Olov, and Asplund, Kjell
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- 2003
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8. Differences in long-term outcome between patients treated in stroke units and in general wards: a 2-year follow-up of stroke patients in sweden.
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Glader E, Stegmayr B, Johansson L, Hulter-Åsberg K, Wester PO, Glader, E L, Stegmayr, B, Johansson, L, Hulter-Asberg, K, and Wester, P O
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- 2001
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9. "Simply complicated": Uncovering the processes of lifestyle behavior change among college and university students with access to a digital multiple lifestyle intervention.
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Åsberg K, Eldh AC, Löf M, and Bendtsen M
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Background: One approach to promoting healthy lifestyle behaviors is to target students with digital interventions. One of these is the digital intervention Buddy. This study aimed to understand why college and university students' chose to participate in a digital multiple lifestyle behavior intervention trial (Buddy), and their subsequent experiences of the behavior-change process., Methods: College and university students taking part in a trial of the Buddy intervention were individually interviewed after completing the 4-month intervention. Participants were guided to narrate their experiences and actions that followed signing up. Altogether, 50 interviews were conducted via telephone. The verbatim transcribed texts were analyzed qualitatively., Results: The analysis generated seven personas, which illustrated the students' different levels of engagement with the intervention and the behavior-change process. These were: the Occupied, the Kickstarter, the Aimless, the Reflective, the Goal-oriented, the Compliant, and the Personally developed. Buddy worked best for students who had clear ideas about what they wanted to change and why, and who were aware of their needs, and those who could translate information and reflection into action and had the mental and physical energy needed to make changes., Conclusions: The progress of behavior change depends on the interaction between the digital mode of delivery, the intervention materials of Buddy, the individual's expectations, needs, and skills, and their current life situation. This suggests that designing lifestyle interventions could benefit from more often considering the various personas' different intentions, knowledge, and contexts. By doing so, interventions are likely to emerge that can better match different needs in the target population., Competing Interests: Marcus Bendtsen own a private company (Alexit AB) that develops and distributes eHealth solutions to the public and private sectors. Alexit AB played no role in developing the intervention, study design, data analysis, data interpretation, or writing of this report. Authors KÅ, ACE, and ML declare that they have no conflicting interests., (© The Author(s) 2024.)
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- 2024
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10. Effects of a single session low-threshold digital intervention for procrastination behaviors among university students (Focus): Findings from a randomized controlled trial.
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Åsberg K, Löf M, and Bendtsen M
- Abstract
Introduction: Procrastination behaviors are common among university students, and have been found to be associated with stress, symptoms of depression, anxiety, and poorer academic performance. There is a need for interventions that can reach students at scale, and therefore this study aimed to estimate the effects of a single session low-threshold digital intervention (Focus) for procrastination behaviors among university students in Sweden., Methods and Analysis: A two-arm, parallel groups (1:1), single blind randomized controlled trial was conducted between February 8 to April 26, 2023. The study used email to invite university students across Sweden to participate in the trial. Both the intervention and the control group were invited to assess their current procrastination behaviors using the Pure Procrastination Scale (PPS). The intervention group immediately received feedback and behavior change advice by means of an interactive website, while the control group was shown their total PPS score without any further feedback. Students were included in the study if they scored 20 points or more on the PPS. Our primary outcome was procrastination behavior measured at 2 months post-randomization. Analyses were conducted using multilevel regression models estimated with Bayesian inference., Results: A total of 2209 participants (intervention: 1109, control: 1100) were randomized. The average age of participants was 26.4 years (SD = 7.8) and 65 % were women ( n = 1442). The mean PPS score at baseline was 35.6 points (of a maximum of 60). Primary outcome data were available for 45 % ( n = 498) of the intervention group and 55 % ( n = 601) of the control group. The evidence suggested no marked difference between groups regarding any of the outcomes, although there was weak evidence of lower physical activity in the intervention group. Qualitative findings from open-ended responses uncovered a variety of views on procrastination and perceived problems that may follow. Those not feeling supported by Focus explained having troubles adopting the advice given and converting their intentions into action without more continuous support., Conclusions: Access to a single session of feedback and behavior change advice by means of an interactive website did not produce differential self-reported procrastination among university students who took the opportunity to self-assess their behaviors. The findings are limited by assessment reactivity due to screening at baseline and attrition to follow-up., Competing Interests: The author MB of this manuscript declare the following conflict of interest: I own a private company (Alexit AB) that develops and distributes eHealth solutions to the public and private sectors. Alexit AB played no role in developing the intervention, study design, data analysis, data interpretation, or writing of this report. Authors KÅ and ML declarations of interest: none., (© 2024 The Authors.)
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- 2024
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11. Mediators of effects of a digital alcohol intervention for online help-seekers: Findings from an effectiveness trial.
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Bendtsen M, Åsberg K, and McCambridge J
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- Humans, Sweden, Alcohol Drinking prevention & control, Cell Phone
- Abstract
Background: Digital alcohol interventions have been shown to exert effects in helping individuals reduce their drinking. However, little is known about the mechanisms which mediate such effects. The objective of this study was to estimate natural direct and indirect effects of a digital alcohol intervention., Methods: This secondary analysis of mediated effects used data from a randomised controlled trial which included individuals with unhealthy alcohol use with access to a mobile phone aged 18 years or older in Sweden. The comparator was basic alcohol and health information. The digital intervention was centrally designed around weekly monitoring of consumption followed by feedback and tools to support behaviour change. Mediated effects were estimated using measures from 1-, 2-, and 4-months post-randomisation. Primary outcomes were total weekly consumption (TWC) and frequency of heavy episodic drinking (HED). A counterfactual framework was used to estimate three hypothesised mediators: importance, knowledge of how to change (know-how), and confidence., Results: Between 25/04/2019 and 26/11/2020, 2129 participants were randomised. The intervention improved know-how and confidence, which in turn mediated the effects on TWC and HED at 2- and 4-months. Analyses with imputed data were not markedly different., Conclusions: A digital alcohol intervention was found to exert effects in reducing consumption by means of improving individuals' knowledge of how to reduce their consumption and confidence in their ability to reduce. The use of face-valid single item measures is a study limitation notwithstanding observed findings, as is attrition and lack of blinding of participants., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest MB owns a private company (Alexit AB) that maintains and distributes evidence-based lifestyle interventions to be used by the public and in health care settings. Alexit AB played no role in developing the intervention, study design, data analysis, data interpretation, or writing of this report. Services developed and maintained by Alexit AB were used for sending text messages and data collection. KÅ and JM declare no competing interests., (Copyright © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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12. Evaluating the effectiveness of a brief digital procrastination intervention targeting university students in Sweden: study protocol for the Focus randomised controlled trial.
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Åsberg K and Bendtsen M
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- Humans, Sweden, Bayes Theorem, Single-Blind Method, Universities, Students, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Procrastination
- Abstract
Introduction: The concept of procrastination can be described as a conscious, yet irrational, postponement of important tasks or decisions-despite awareness that the delay may lead to negative consequences. Procrastination behaviours are common among university students and is often described as a failure of self-regulation, and the behaviour is associated with stress, symptoms of depression and anxiety, poorer academic performance and negative effects on overall health and well-being., Methods and Analysis: A two-arm, parallel groups (1:1), single-blind randomised controlled trial will be conducted to assess the effectiveness of a brief digital procrastination intervention (Focus) among university students in Sweden. The intervention consists of a screening and feedback component based on Pure Procrastination Scale (PPS) score, allowing intervention participants to assess their current procrastination behaviours and receive behaviour change advice. Participants in the control group will be shown their total PPS score without any further feedback. Monte Carlo simulations (assuming a standardised effect of 0.35 Cohen's d of the intervention on the primary outcome, to at least 80% of the time estimate a posterior probability of effect of at least 95%) indicated that data from 1000 participants are required for analysis, meaning that 2000 participants are required to be randomised when assuming a 50% attrition rate. The primary outcome will be procrastination behaviour measured at 2 months postrandomisation. Secondary outcomes will be anxiety and stress symptoms and lifestyle behaviours. Outcomes will be analysed using multilevel regression models estimated using Bayesian inference., Ethics and Dissemination: The study was approved by the Swedish Ethical Review Authority on 2022-08-24 (dnr 2022-00353). Students will be asked to give informed consent before participation and after having been given information about the study. The results will be submitted for publication in open access, peer-reviewed journals., Trial Registration Number: ISRCTN13533793., Competing Interests: Competing interests: MB owns a private company (Alexit AB) that maintains and distributes evidence-based lifestyle interventions to be used by the public and in health care settings. Alexit AB played no role in developing the intervention, study design, data analysis, data interpretation or writing of this report., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2023. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2023
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13. Reporting Ethics Approval in Articles on Criminality. An Audit of Adherence to Swedish Legislation.
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Asplund K and Hulter Åsberg K
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- Humans, Sweden, Crime, Ethics Committees, Research, Criminal Behavior
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According to the Swedish Ethics Review Act, research involving personal data on crimes should undergo independent ethics review. To explore the reporting of ethics approval, we extracted information from articles with Swedish personal data on crimes published in 2013-2021. Of the identified 298 articles, 92 (31%) failed to report ethics approval. Failures were particularly common in articles with a qualitative design, single or few authors and when there was a social science focus. Failures varied markedly between universities. We conclude that failures to report compulsory ethics approval are common in articles involving personal data on crime and that these failures vary markedly with the research setting. Several indicators of poor adherence to the Ethics Review Act have been identified.
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- 2023
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14. A balancing act-finding one´s way to health and well-being: A qualitative analysis of interviews with Swedish university students on lifestyle and behavior change.
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Åsberg K, Eldh AC, Löf M, and Bendtsen M
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- Humans, Students, Sweden, Universities, Young Adult, Life Style, Quality of Life
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Introduction: Unhealthy lifestyle behaviors such as unhealthy diets, low physical activity levels, smoking, and harmful alcohol consumption are common in student populations, which constitute a large group of young adults. As unhealthy lifestyle behaviors are associated with future disease and premature mortality, most commonly from cardiovascular disease and cancers, it is from a public health perspective important to understand such behaviors in young adult populations. The objective of this study was to investigate university students' experiences of health, health-related behaviors, and the barriers and facilitators for behavior change in terms of health promotion in everyday life., Materials and Methods: This qualitative study was conducted at a middle-sized university in Sweden. Students represented different faculties and were recruited via non-probability convenience sampling using means such as the snowball technique and social media. The 21 interviews with 24 students, individually or in groups, were transcribed verbatim prior to a qualitative analysis inspired by phenomenological hermeneutics., Results: Our interviews showed that university student life is associated with new health-related challenges, for example study-related stress and procrastination implies a lack of energy to engage in healthy routines such as physical activity, and a limited budget affects food choices. While adapting to a new context, students explore personal strategies such as taking on changes in manageable steps, seeking social support, and avoiding disturbances to maintaining health and quality of life., Conclusions: Experiences of health while becoming and being a university student can be described as a transition-a balancing act of walking a slack line-during which students seek to manage a healthy balance. In the past, interventions have to some extent been designed to address university students' behaviors; however, our study aids an understanding of their needs. Future interventions should highlight the transitions they are experiencing and the challenges of student life., Competing Interests: I have read the journal’s policy and the author MB of this manuscript have the following competing interests: author MB owns a private company (Alexit AB) that develops and distributes lifestyle behavior interventions for use in healthcare settings. Alexit AB had no part in the funding, planning, or execution of this study. This does not alter our adherence to PLOS ONE policies on sharing data and materials, all authors had full access to all materials. Authors KÅ, ACE, and ML declare no conflicts of interest.
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- 2022
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15. Digital multiple health behaviour change intervention targeting online help seekers: protocol for the COACH randomised factorial trial.
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Åsberg K, Blomqvist J, Lundgren O, Henriksson H, Henriksson P, Bendtsen P, Löf M, and Bendtsen M
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- Alcohol Drinking prevention & control, Diet, Humans, Life Style, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Exercise, Health Behavior
- Abstract
Introduction: Unhealthy lifestyle behaviours continue to be highly prevalent, including alcohol consumption, unhealthy diets, insufficient physical activity and smoking. There is a lack of effective interventions which have a large enough reach into the community to improve public health. Additionally, the common co-occurrence of multiple unhealthy behaviours demands investigation of efforts which address more than single behaviours., Methods and Analysis: The effects of six components of a novel digital multiple health behaviour change intervention on alcohol consumption, diet, physical activity and smoking (coprimary outcomes) will be estimated in a factorial randomised trial. The components are designed to facilitate behaviour change, for example, through goal setting or increasing motivation, and are either present or absent depending on allocation (ie, six factors with two levels each). The study population will be those seeking help online, recruited through search engines, social media and lifestyle-related websites. Included will be those who are at least 18 years of age and have at least one unhealthy behaviour. An adaptive design will be used to periodically make decisions to continue or stop recruitment, with simulations suggesting a final sample size between 1500 and 2500 participants. Multilevel regression models will be used to analyse behavioural outcomes collected at 2 months and 4 months postrandomisation., Ethics and Dissemination: Approved by the Swedish Ethical Review Authority on 2021-08-11 (Dnr 2021-02855). Since participation is likely motivated by gaining access to novel support, the main concern is demotivation and opportunity cost if the intervention is found to only exert small effects. Recruitment began on 19 October 2021, with an anticipated recruitment period of 12 months., Trial Registration Number: ISRCTN16420548., Competing Interests: Competing interests: MB and PB own a private company (Alexit AB) that develops and distributes lifestyle behaviour interventions for use in healthcare settings. Alexit AB had no part in funding or planning of this trial but is relied upon for a service to send text messages., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2022
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16. Effectiveness of a digital intervention versus alcohol information for online help-seekers in Sweden: a randomised controlled trial.
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Bendtsen M, Åsberg K, and McCambridge J
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- Bayes Theorem, Humans, Self Report, Sweden epidemiology, Alcohol Drinking epidemiology, Alcohol Drinking prevention & control, Cell Phone
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Background: The ubiquity of Internet connectivity, and widespread unmet needs, requires investigations of digital interventions for people seeking help with their drinking. The objective of this study was to test the effectiveness of a digital alcohol intervention compared to existing online resources for help seekers., Methods: This parallel randomised controlled trial included 2129 risky drinkers with access to a mobile phone and aged 18 years or older. Randomised sub-studies investigated consent procedures and control group design. Simple computerised randomisation was used. Participants were aware of allocation after randomisation; research personnel were not. The digital intervention was designed around weekly monitoring of alcohol consumption followed by feedback and tools for behaviour change. Primary outcomes were total weekly consumption (TWC) and frequency of heavy episodic drinking (HED), measured 2 and 4 months post-randomisation., Results: Between 25/04/2019 and 26/11/2020, 2129 participants were randomised (intervention: 1063, control: 1066). Negative binomial regression was used to contrast groups, with both Bayesian and maximum likelihood inference. The posterior median incidence rate ratio (IRR) of TWC was 0.89 (95% CI = 0.81;0.99, 98.2% probability of effect, P-value = 0.033) at 2 months among 1557 participants and 0.77 (95% CI = 0.69;0.86, > 99.9% probability of effect, P-value < 0.001) at 4 months among 1429 participants. For HED, the IRR was 0.83 (95% CI = 0.75;0.93, > 99.9% probability of effect, P-value = 0.0009) at 2 months among 1548 participants and 0.71 (95% CI = 0.63;0.79, probability of effect > 99.9%, P-value < 0.0001) at 4 months among 1424 participants. Analyses with imputed data were not markedly different., Conclusions: A digital alcohol intervention produced self-reported behaviour change among online help seekers in the general population. The internal and external validity of this trial is strong, subject to carefully considered study limitations arguably inherent to trials of this nature. Limitations include higher than anticipated attrition to follow-up and lack of blinding., Trial Registration: The trial was prospectively registered ( ISRCTN48317451 )., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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17. Reporting ethical approval in health and social science articles: an audit of adherence to GDPR and national legislation.
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Asplund K and Hulter Åsberg K
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- Ethical Review, Humans, Research Report, Social Sciences, Ethics, Research, Informed Consent
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Background: Previous studies have indicated that failure to report ethical approval is common in health science articles. In social sciences, the occurrence is unknown. The Swedish Ethics Review Act requests that sensitive personal data, in accordance with the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), should undergo independent ethical review, irrespective of academic discipline. We have explored the adherence to this regulation., Methods: Using the Web of Science databases, we reviewed 600 consecutive articles from three domains (health sciences with and without somatic focus and social sciences) based on identifiable personal data published in 2020., Results: Information on ethical review was lacking in 12 of 200 health science articles with somatic focus (6%), 21 of 200 health science articles with non-somatic focus (11%), and in 54 of 200 social science articles (27%; p < 0.001 vs. both groups of health science articles). Failure to report on ethical approval was more common in (a) observational than in interventional studies (p < 0.01), (b) articles with only 1-2 authors (p < 0.001) and (c) health science articles from universities without a medical school (p < 0.001). There was no significant association between journal impact factor and failure to report ethical approval., Conclusions: We conclude that reporting of research ethics approval is reasonably good, but not strict, in health science articles. Failure to report ethical approval is about three times more frequent in social sciences compared to health sciences. Improved adherence seems needed particularly in observational studies, in articles with few authors and in social science research., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
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- 2021
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18. Perioperative digital behaviour change interventions for reducing alcohol consumption, improving dietary intake, increasing physical activity and smoking cessation: a scoping review.
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Åsberg K and Bendtsen M
- Abstract
Background: Evidence suggests that unhealthy lifestyle behaviours are modifiable risk factors for postoperative complications. Digital behaviour change interventions (DBCIs), for instance text messaging programs and smartphone apps, have shown promise in achieving lifestyle behaviour change in a wide range of clinical populations, and it may therefore be possible to reduce postoperative complications by supporting behaviour change perioperatively using digital interventions. This scoping review was conducted in order to identify existing research done in the area of perioperative DBCIs for reducing alcohol consumption, improving dietary intake, increasing physical activity and smoking cessation., Main Text: This scoping review included eleven studies covering a range of surgeries: bariatric, orthopaedic, cancer, transplantation and elective surgery. The studies were both randomised controlled trials and feasibility studies and investigated a diverse set of interventions: one game, three smartphone apps, one web-based program and five text message interventions. Feasibility studies reported user acceptability and satisfaction with the behaviour change support. Engagement data showed participation rates ranged from 40 to 90%, with more participants being actively engaged early in the intervention period. In conclusion, the only full-scale randomised controlled trial (RCT), text messaging ahead of bariatric surgery did not reveal any benefits with respect to adherence to preoperative exercise advice when compared to a control group. Two of the pilot studies, one text message intervention, one game, indicated change in a positive direction with respect to alcohol and tobacco outcomes, but between group comparisons were not done due to small sample sizes. The third pilot-study, a smartphone app, found between group changes for physical activity and alcohol, but not with respect to smoking cessation outcomes., Conclusion: This review found high participant satisfaction, but shows recruitment and timing-delivery issues, as well as low retention to interventions post-surgery. Small sample sizes and the use of a variety of feasibility outcome measures prevent the synthesis of results and makes generalisation difficult. Future research should focus on defining standardised outcome measures, enhancing patient engagement and improving adherence to behaviour change prior to scheduled surgery.
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- 2021
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19. Text messaging interventions for reducing alcohol consumption among risky drinkers: systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Bendtsen M, McCambridge J, Åsberg K, and Bendtsen P
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- Alcohol Drinking prevention & control, Female, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Male, Text Messaging
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Background and Aims: The global growth of mobile phone use has led to new opportunities for health interventions, including through text messaging. We aimed to estimate the effects of text messaging interventions on alcohol consumption among risky drinkers., Methods: Systematic review and meta-analysis of reports on randomized controlled trials (RCTs) published in English. Searches were conducted on 23 May 2019 in PubMed; PubMed Central; CENTRAL; CDSR; DARE; NHS-EED; Scopus; PsycINFO; PsycARTICLES; CINAHL; and Web of Science. Measurements included number of episodes of heavy drinking (HED) per month and weekly alcohol consumption (WAC) in grams. Trials among risky drinkers who were not receiving co-interventions were included in the review (n = 3481, mean age 29 years, 41% female). Data were extracted from reports and authors were contacted for additional data., Results: Ten trials were included and all analyses were based on random-effects models. Primary analyses, including seven trials (n = 2528) for HED and five trials (n = 2236) for WAC, found that the interventions may reduce self-reported HED [-0.33 episodes per month; 95% confidence interval (CI) = -0.79, 0.12] and WAC (-18.62 g per week; 95% CI = -39.61, 2.38), although both estimates included the null. The Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development and Evaluations (GRADE) quality of evidence was judged to be low for both HED and WAC, primarily due to risk of attrition and performance bias, heterogeneity and influence of pilot trials on estimates., Conclusions: Text messaging alcohol interventions may reduce alcohol consumption compared with no or basic health information; however, there are doubts about the overall quality of the evidence., (© 2020 The Authors. Addiction published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Society for the Study of Addiction.)
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- 2021
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20. Development of an Intervention Targeting Multiple Health Behaviors Among High School Students: Participatory Design Study Using Heuristic Evaluation and Usability Testing.
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Müssener U, Thomas K, Linderoth C, Löf M, Åsberg K, Henriksson P, and Bendtsen M
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- Adolescent, Adult, Female, Health Behavior, Heuristics, Humans, Male, Schools, Students, Sweden, User-Centered Design, Young Adult, Mobile Applications, User-Computer Interface
- Abstract
Background: Mobile electronic platforms provide exciting possibilities for health behavior promotion. For instance, they can promote smoking cessation, moderate alcohol consumption, healthy eating, and physical activity. Young adults in Sweden are proficient in the use of technology, having been exposed to computers, smartphones, and the internet from an early age. However, with the high availability of mobile health (mHealth) interventions of varying quality, it is critical to optimize the usability of mHealth interventions to ensure long-term use of these health promotion interventions., Objective: This study aims to investigate the usability of an mHealth intervention (LIFE4YOUth) targeting health behaviors among high school students through heuristic evaluation and usability testing., Methods: A preliminary version of the LIFE4YOUth mHealth intervention, which was aimed at promoting healthy eating, physical activity, smoking cessation, and nonrisky drinking among high school students, was developed in early 2019. We completed a total of 15 heuristic evaluations and 5 usability tests to evaluate the usability of the mHealth intervention prototype to improve its functioning, content, and design., Results: Heuristic evaluation from a total of 15 experts (10 employees and 5 university students, both women and men, aged 18-25 years) revealed that the major usability problems and the worst ratings, a total of 17 problems termed usability catastrophes, concerned shortcomings in displaying easy-to-understand information to the users or technical errors. The results of the usability testing including 5 high school students (both girls and boys, aged 15-18 years) showed that the design, quality, and quantity of content in the intervention may impact the users' level of engagement. Poor functionality was considered a major barrier to usability. Of the 5 participants, one rated the LIFE4YOUth intervention as poor, 2 rated as average, and 2 assessed it as good, according to the System Usability Scale., Conclusions: High school students have high expectations of digital products. If an mHealth intervention does not offer optimal functions, they may cease to use it. Optimizing the usability of mHealth interventions is a critical step in the development process. Heuristic evaluation and usability testing in this study provided valuable knowledge about the prototype from a user's perspective. The findings may lead to the development of similar interventions targeting the high school population., (©Ulrika Müssener, Kristin Thomas, Catharina Linderoth, Marie Löf, Katarina Åsberg, Pontus Henriksson, Marcus Bendtsen. Originally published in JMIR mHealth and uHealth (http://mhealth.jmir.org), 29.10.2020.)
- Published
- 2020
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21. [Far from equal stroke care].
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Hulter Åsberg K
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- Family, Humans, Social Support, Sweden, Healthcare Disparities, Stroke therapy, Stroke Rehabilitation standards
- Published
- 2016
22. Cumulative risk hypothesis: Predicting and preventing child maltreatment recidivism.
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Solomon D, Åsberg K, Peer S, and Prince G
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- Adolescent, Adult, Caregivers statistics & numerical data, Child, Child Protective Services methods, Female, Humans, Male, Parents psychology, Recurrence, Risk Assessment methods, Risk Factors, Young Adult, Child Abuse prevention & control, Recidivism psychology
- Abstract
Although Child Protective Services (CPS) and other child welfare agencies aim to prevent further maltreatment in cases of child abuse and neglect, recidivism is common. Having a better understanding of recidivism predictors could aid in preventing additional instances of maltreatment. A previous study identified two CPS interventions that predicted recidivism: psychotherapy for the parent, which was related to a reduced risk of recidivism, and temporary removal of the child from the parent's custody, which was related to an increased recidivism risk. However, counter to expectations, this previous study did not identify any other specific risk factors related to maltreatment recidivism. For the current study, it was hypothesized that (a) cumulative risk (i.e., the total number of risk factors) would significantly predict maltreatment recidivism above and beyond intervention variables in a sample of CPS case files and that (b) therapy for the parent would be related to a reduced likelihood of recidivism. Because it was believed that the relation between temporary removal of a child from the parent's custody and maltreatment recidivism is explained by cumulative risk, the study also hypothesized that that the relation between temporary removal of the child from the parent's custody and recidivism would be mediated by cumulative risk. After performing a hierarchical logistic regression analysis, the first two hypotheses were supported, and an additional predictor, psychotherapy for the child, also was related to reduced chances of recidivism. However, Hypothesis 3 was not supported, as risk did not significantly mediate the relation between temporary removal and recidivism., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2016
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23. [Findings of unknown medical records from the Finnish war of 1808-1809].
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Hulter Åsberg K
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- Finland, History, 19th Century, Humans, Russia, Sweden, Armed Conflicts history, Medical Records
- Published
- 2016
24. [The debate about life-sustaining treatment. The jurisprudence becomes clearer, but...].
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Hulter Åsberg K and Kumlien E
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- Humans, Life Support Care legislation & jurisprudence
- Published
- 2015
25. [Clarify the jurisprudence regarding life-sustaining treatment].
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Hulter Åsberg K and Kumlien E
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- Humans, Life Support Care legislation & jurisprudence
- Published
- 2015
26. Coming Out and the Potential for Growth in Sexual Minorities: The Role of Social Reactions and Internalized Homonegativity.
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Solomon D, McAbee J, Åsberg K, and McGee A
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Defense Mechanisms, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Self Concept, Social Environment, Young Adult, Homophobia, Minority Groups psychology, Self Disclosure, Sexual and Gender Minorities psychology, Stress, Physiological
- Abstract
Coming out is a significant and sometimes difficult process in the lives of sexual minorities, but disclosure can also affect wellbeing in positive ways, including reduced distress and greater relationship satisfaction. This study investigates the possibility of stress-related growth and depreciation following coming out. To obtain a diverse sample with varying coming-out experiences, data were collected from undergraduate students as well as from online sources, including lesbian, gay, and bisexual support groups and Pride groups. Regression analyses indicated that negative social reactions to coming out predicted both growth and depreciation, although they more strongly predicted depreciation. Positive social reactions were positively related to stress-related growth, while internalized homonegativity was inversely associated with growth. Although the two sample sources (online and campus) differed in some ways, sample source was not a significant predictor in the regressions, nor was it indicated as a moderator in exploratory ANOVA analyses.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. The Riks-Stroke story: building a sustainable national register for quality assessment of stroke care.
- Author
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Asplund K, Hulter Åsberg K, Appelros P, Bjarne D, Eriksson M, Johansson A, Jonsson F, Norrving B, Stegmayr B, Terént A, Wallin S, and Wester PO
- Subjects
- Humans, Outcome Assessment, Health Care standards, Outcome Assessment, Health Care statistics & numerical data, Quality Assurance, Health Care standards, Quality Assurance, Health Care statistics & numerical data, Sweden, Neurology standards, Outcome Assessment, Health Care methods, Quality Assurance, Health Care methods, Registries standards, Registries statistics & numerical data, Stroke therapy
- Abstract
Background: Riks-Stroke, the Swedish Stroke Register, is the world's longest-running national stroke quality register (established in 1994) and includes all 76 hospitals in Sweden admitting acute stroke patients. The development and maintenance of this sustainable national register is described., Methods: Riks-Stroke includes information on the quality of care during the acute phase, rehabilitation and secondary prevention of stroke, as well as data on community support. Riks-Stroke is unique among stroke quality registers in that patients are followed during the first year after stroke. The data collected describe processes, and medical and patient-reported outcome measurements. The register embraces most of the dimensions of health-care quality (evidence-based, safe, provided in time, distributed fairly and patient oriented)., Result: Annually, approximately 25,000 patients are included. In 2009, approximately 320,000 patients had been accumulated (mean age 76-years). The register is estimated to cover 82% of all stroke patients treated in Swedish hospitals. Among critical issues when building a national stroke quality register, the delicate balance between simplicity and comprehensiveness is emphasised. Future developments include direct transfer of data from digital medical records to Riks-Stroke and comprehensive strategies to use the information collected to rapidly implement new evidence-based techniques and to eliminate outdated methods in stroke care., Conclusions: It is possible to establish a sustainable quality register for stroke at the national level covering all hospitals admitting acute stroke patients. Riks-Stroke is fulfilling its main goals to support continuous quality improvement of Swedish stroke services and serve as an instrument for following up national stroke guidelines., (© 2010 The Authors. International Journal of Stroke © 2010 World Stroke Organization.)
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Discarding heparins as treatment for progressive stroke in Sweden 2001 to 2008.
- Author
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Eriksson M, Stecksén A, Glader EL, Norrving B, Appelros P, Hulter Åsberg K, Stegmayr B, Terént A, and Asplund K
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Guidelines as Topic, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Registries, Retrospective Studies, Sweden, Young Adult, Anticoagulants therapeutic use, Disease Progression, Heparin therapeutic use, Practice Patterns, Physicians' trends, Stroke drug therapy
- Abstract
Background and Purpose: High-dose heparin has been used extensively to treat patients with progressive ischemic stroke, but the scientific support is poor and the current stroke guidelines advise against its use. We studied how heparin treatment for progressive stroke has been discarded in Sweden., Methods: All 78 hospitals in Sweden that admit acute stroke patients participate in Riks-Stroke, the Swedish Stroke Register. During 2001 to 2008, information on the use of high-dose heparin was available for 155,344 patients with acute ischemic stroke. The determinants as to region, patient characteristics, and stroke service settings were analyzed., Results: Use of heparin for progressive stroke declined from 7.5% (2001) to 1.6% (2008) of all patients with ischemic stroke. The marked regional differences present in 2001 were reduced over time. The use of heparin declined at a similar rate in all types of hospital settings, in stroke units vs nonstroke units, and in neurological vs medical wards. Independent predictors of use of heparin included younger age, first-ever stroke, independence in activities of daily living before stroke, atrial fibrillation, no aspirin treatment, and lowered consciousness on admission., Conclusions: There is no immediate, stepwise effect of new scientific information and national guidelines on clinical practice. Rather, the phasing out of heparin has followed a linear course over several years, with less variation between hospitals. We speculate that open comparisons between hospitals in a national stroke register may have helped to reduce the variations in clinical practice.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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