75 research outputs found
Development of the Persuasion Knowledge Scales of Sponsored Content (PKS-SC)
Despite the popularity of the Persuasion Knowledge Model, and its persistent relevance given the omnipresence of sponsored content (e.g. brand placement in TV programmes and video games, or paid product reviews in blogs), the way scholars measure persuasion knowledge varies widely. This study aims to develop valid and reliable scales for standardized measurement of consumers' persuasion knowledge of sponsored content. In three phases, we developed the Persuasion Knowledge Scales of Sponsored Content (PKS-SC) that measures nine components: (1) recognition of sponsored content, (2) understanding of selling and persuasive intent, (3) recognition of the commercial source of sponsored content, (4) understanding of persuasive tactics, (5) understanding of the economic model, (6) self-reflective awareness of the effectiveness of sponsored content, (7) skepticism toward sponsored content, (8) appropriateness of sponsored content, and (9) liking of sponsored content. All scales have good to appropriate validity and reliability. Recommendations for future research are discussed.</p
The opportunities item response theory (IRT) offers to health psychologists : Methods in Health Psychology Symposium IV
Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Explaining the amount and consistency of medical care and self-management support in asthma : a survey of primary care providers in France and the United Kingdom
Copyright © 2018. Published by Elsevier Inc.Peer reviewedPostprin
Does adherence to inhaled corticosteroids predict asthma-related outcomes over time? A cohort study
Funding: The research leading to these results has received funding from the European Community 7th Framework (FP7/2007-2013) under grant agreement n°282593, and H2020 programme (MSCA-IF) under GA n°706028 for AD during manuscript preparation.Peer reviewedPostprin
Asthma inhaler adherence determinants in adults : systematic review of observational data
Copyright ©ERS 2014. Acknowledgements We would like to thank Eric van Ganse (Claude Bernard University Lyon 1, Lyon, France) and Marcel Bouvy (Utrecht University, Utrecht, the Netherlands) for valuable discussions regarding the systematic review process, and Dan Dediu (Max Plank Institute, Nijmegen, the Netherlands) for support with conducting the review and summarising results visuallyPeer reviewedPostprin
What We Mean When We Talk About Adherence In Respiratory Medicine
The Respiratory Effectiveness Group (REG; www.effectivenessevaluation.org) supported the Expert Adherence Panel Meeting at which many of the concepts presented in this paper were first discussed. REG also supported the manuscript submission costs. ALD, EvG, and MdB have received funding from the European Community's 7th Framework (FP7/2007-2013) under grant agreement no. 282593. Teva supported the meeting costs at which the concepts in this paper were discussed by the co-authors and the open access publication fee for this article. The authors had full editorial control over the ideas presented.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Measuring medication adherence in asthma : Development of a novel self-report tool
Funding: This work was supported by European Community’s 7th Framework (FP7/2007-2013); Seventh Framework Programme [HEALTH-F5-2011-282593].Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Performance of database-derived severe exacerbations and asthma control measures in asthma : responsiveness and predictive utility in a UK primary care database with linked questionnaire data
Peer reviewedPublisher PD
The Relationship Between Real-World Inhaled Corticosteroid Adherence and Asthma Outcomes:A Multilevel Approach
Background: Low inhaled corticosteroid (ICS) adherence is associated with increased asthma burden. This relationship is likely bidirectional, and may vary across adherence stages (initiation, implementation, and persistence). Studies rarely examine reciprocal influences. Objective: To investigate the relationship between ICS implementation and asthma-related outcomes over 2 years, considering bidirectionality and temporal sequence. Methods: Primary care records (1987-2012) from the Optimum Patient Care Research Database, United Kingdom, were used. Eligible patients were 6 years or older and had 3 or more years of continuous registration starting 1 year before ICS initiation (index date), physician-diagnosed asthma, 2 or more ICS and/or short-acting β-agonist prescriptions each follow-up year, and no long-acting β-agonists, leukotriene receptor antagonists, or maintenance oral corticosteroids in the preceding year. ICS implementation (percentage of days covered) and risk domain asthma control (RDAC; no asthma-related hospitalizations, emergency visits, or outpatient visits and no oral corticosteroid or antibiotic prescriptions with evidence of respiratory review) were estimated for each prescription interval (period between 2 successive prescriptions). Multilevel analyses modeled bidirectional relationships between ICS implementation and RDAC (and its components), controlling for sociodemographic and clinical characteristics. Results: In prescription data from 10,472 patients, ICS implementation in the preceding interval did not predict RDAC, but was weakly positively associated with simultaneous RDAC. Being male, non–current smoker, without chronic obstructive pulmonary disease diagnosis, and with fewer than 4 comorbidities significantly increased odds of RDAC. Asthma-related antibiotics and outpatient visits in the same interval and short-acting β-agonist overuse in the preceding and same interval predicted lower ICS implementation. Conclusions: Patients may adapt their ICS use to their current needs without this impacting later RDAC.</p
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