562 research outputs found

    Charting new territories in health psychology: a reflection on the EHPS 2022 ‘digital divide’ hybrid roundtable

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    This paper reflects on the roundtable session at the 36th annual conference of the European Health Psychology Society titled‘Mind the digital divide: How to reduce social inequalities in digital health promotion?’, chaired by Dr Laura M König and Dr Max J Western. The session was intended to present contemporary evidence on the existence of a digital divide in health behaviour promotion via two brief presentations of recent evidence syntheses by Dr Eline Smit and Dr Max Western, followed by two short talks on potential underlying mechanisms of the digital divide by Professors Efrat Neter and Falko Sniehotta. Finally, we aimed to explore through a panel discussion and an audience workshop how we, the health psychology community, could focus our research on better understanding and addressing this phenomenon. In the following, we will discuss how the roundtable was implemented and which aspects were perceived to be most useful from the perspectives of the organising chairs, presenters and participants, to provide input for roundtable organisers at future conferences

    sj-docx-1-dhj-10.1177_20552076231183543 - Supplemental material for Using a complexity science approach to evaluate the effectiveness of just-in-time adaptive interventions: A meta-analysis

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    Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-dhj-10.1177_20552076231183543 for Using a complexity science approach to evaluate the effectiveness of just-in-time adaptive interventions: A meta-analysis by Zhan Xu and Eline Smit in DIGITAL HEALTH</p

    sj-pdf-1-pom-10.1177_03057356211008972 – Supplemental material for Evaluative conditioning of responses to unfamiliar chords by exposure to valenced images

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    Supplemental material, sj-pdf-1-pom-10.1177_03057356211008972 for Evaluative conditioning of responses to unfamiliar chords by exposure to valenced images by Eline A Smit, Andrew J Milne, Roger T Dean and Gabrielle Weidemann in Psychology of Music</p

    DHJ888074 Supplementary material - Supplemental material for Customization in mobile health apps: explaining effects on physical activity intentions by the need for autonomy

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    Supplemental material, DHJ888074 Supplementary material for Customization in mobile health apps: explaining effects on physical activity intentions by the need for autonomy by Nadine Bol, Nina Margareta Høie, Minh Hao Nguyen and Eline Suzanne Smit in Digital Health</p

    sj-pdf-1-jhs-10.1177_17531934231153029 - Supplemental material for Factors associated with self-reported pain and hand function following dorsal wrist ganglion excision

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    Supplemental material, sj-pdf-1-jhs-10.1177_17531934231153029 for Factors associated with self-reported pain and hand function following dorsal wrist ganglion excision by Martina Greminger, Jaimy Emerentiana Koopman, Yara Eline van Kooij, Lisa Hoogendam, Jeroen Smit, Harm Pieter Slijper, Ruud Willem Selles, Maurizio Calcagni, the SUpExOr Study Group the Hand-Wrist Study Group in Journal of Hand Surgery (European Volume)</p

    On ableism and anthropocentrism: A canine perspective on the workplace inclusion of disabled people

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    Despite growing attention for how disabled people become Othered in organizational settings and similar scholarly interest in the treatment of non-humans at work, no analysis so far has focused on the potential double marginalization that takes place when disabled people go to work with their service animal. In filling this void, this study draws attention to the embodied entanglement of 'humanimal' in a number of organizations where animals are unexpected. The study argues that the spatial, discursive and affective treatment of service dogs operates as a proxy for the in/exclusion of employees with mobility and visual impairments. This way, processes of ableism become masked as subtle and indirect performances towards non-human Others. Contributions are made towards several literatures by introducing the idea of a 'proxy' to help understand the different modes of peripheral inclusion of disabled employees via their legally accepted service animals, by bringing in the role of affect in workplace disablement, and finally by taking animal labour more seriously.The author received no financial support for the research, authorship and/or publication of this article. The illustrations used in this article are the intellectual property of Benoît Raucent (UCLouvain). I thank Benoît and I thank the participants in this study for their valuable contributions

    Translating health psychology into practice: A summary of the ‘Tackling the Digital Divide:Forming recommendations for health psychologists’ roundtable at EHPS 2023

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    This article summarises a roundtable discussion at the 37th annual conference of the European Health Psychology Society (EHPS) titled: Tackling the Digital Divide: Forming recommendations for health psychologists. Chaired by Dr Eline Smit and Dr Heidi Busse, this session built upon a successful roundtable on the digital health divide at the 2022 EHPS conference. The aim was to move the conversation on from trying tounderstand the why, what and how of the digital divide, to how researchers can contribute to narrowing the divide

    Turning disability into a business: Disabled entrepreneurs' anomalous bodily capital

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    In a time and place where being impaired is equated to being of lesser economic value, some disabled people take matters into their own hands by creating their own job and converting their bodily difference into bodily capital. This paper uses a Bourdieuan lens to discover what sets apart disabled entrepreneurs who build their business around disability and those who do not. Building on the experiences of 40 entrepreneurs, we outline the existence of certain bodily and mental schemata that lead to a body habituated to run a business centred around one's impairment and experience of living as a disabled person in an ableist world. We specify such 'anomalous' bodily capital and discuss the constraints to its conversion related to the social environment and impairment effects. This study speaks back to the literature on disability in organizational contexts by extending the 'value in disability' debate whilst remaining cognizant of the danger of 'supercrip' stereotyping and disability ghettoization. In addition, the complex structure/agency interplay inherent to the practice of leveraging anomalous bodily capital offers a contribution to entrepreneurship research that tends to adhere to a simplistic view of the body.The author(s) received no financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article

    Editorial: The impact of exposure to environmental chemicals, pharmaceuticals and particles via human breast milk: a focus on health effects and underlying mechanisms

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    The author(s) declare that financial support was received for the research and/or publication of this article. Charlotte Cosemans was financially supported by the Research Foundation Flanders (FWO; 1249025N)
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