Deakin home > Deakin University Library > Deakin Research Online > Indirect approaches to obesity: are they likely to be more successful than direct behavioural interventions

Indirect approaches to obesity: are they likely to be more successful than direct behavioural interventions

Swinburn, Boyd 2007, Indirect approaches to obesity: are they likely to be more successful than direct behavioural interventions, Obesity reviews, vol. 8, no. 1, pp. 91-92.

Attached Files (Some files may be inaccessible until you login with your Deakin Research Online credentials)
Name Description MIMEType Size Downloads

Title Indirect approaches to obesity: are they likely to be more successful than direct behavioural interventions
Formatted title 'Indirect' approaches to obesity: are they likely to be more successful than `direct` behavioural interventions?
Author(s) Swinburn, Boyd
Journal name Obesity reviews
Volume number 8
Issue number 1
Start page 91
End page 92
Total pages 2 pp
Publisher Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Place of publication Oxford, England
Publication date 2007-01
ISSN 1467-7881
1467-789X
Summary The article comments on the paper of Manfred Müller and Sandra Danielzik about the indirect approaches to obesity. They are looking for alternatives that are both insighful and well-grounded in experience of single or multiple behavioral interventions on obesity prevalence. The author suggested various approaches including community capacity, counter commercialism, cultural change and contagion creation.
Notes The definitive version is available at www.blackwell-synergy.com Published online Oct 2006
Language eng
Field of Research 111799 Public Health and Health Services not elsewhere classified
HERDC Research category C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal
ERA Research output type X Not reportable
HERDC collection year 2006
Copyright notice ©2006, The International Association for the Study of Obesity
Persistent URL http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30003970

Document type: Journal Article
Collection: School of Exercise and Nutrition Sciences
Connect to link resolver
 
Unless expressly stated otherwise, the copyright for items in Deakin Research Online is owned by the author, with all rights reserved.

Versions
Version Filter Type
Citation counts: TR Web of Science Citation Count  Cited 1 times in TR Web of Science
Scopus Citation Count Cited 2 times in Scopus
Access Statistics: 463 Abstract Views, 0 File Downloads  -  Detailed Statistics
Created: Mon, 07 Jul 2008, 09:08:25 EST