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    A refined taxonomy of behaviour change techniques to help people change their physical activity and healthy eating behaviours: the CALO-RE taxonomy.

    Michie, Susan; Ashford, Stefanie; Sniehotta, Falko F; Dombrowski, Stephan U; Bishop, Alex; French, David P

    Psychology & health. 2011;26(11):1479-98.

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    Abstract

    BACKGROUND: Current reporting of intervention content in published research articles and protocols is generally poor, with great diversity of terminology, resulting in low replicability. This study aimed to extend the scope and improve the reliability of a 26-item taxonomy of behaviour change techniques developed by Abraham and Michie [Abraham, C. and Michie, S. (2008). A taxonomy of behaviour change techniques used in interventions. Health Psychology, 27(3), 379-387.] in order to optimise the reporting and scientific study of behaviour change interventions. Methods: Three UK study centres collaborated in applying this existing taxonomy to two systematic reviews of interventions to increase physical activity and healthy eating. The taxonomy was refined in iterative steps of (1) coding intervention descriptions, and assessing inter-rater reliability, (2) identifying gaps and problems across study centres and (3) refining the labels and definitions based on consensus discussions. RESULTS: Labels and definitions were improved for all techniques, conceptual overlap between categories was resolved, some categories were split and 14 techniques were added, resulting in a 40-item taxonomy. Inter-rater reliability, assessed on 50 published intervention descriptions, was good (kappa = 0.79). CONCLUSIONS: This taxonomy can be used to improve the specification of interventions in published reports, thus improving replication, implementation and evidence syntheses. This will strengthen the scientific study of behaviour change and intervention development.

    Bibliographic metadata

    Type of resource:
    Content type:
    Publication type:
    Published date:
    Journal title:
    Abbreviated journal title:
    ISSN:
    Place of publication:
    England
    Volume:
    26
    Issue:
    11
    Pagination:
    1479-98
    Digital Object Identifier:
    10.1080/08870446.2010.540664
    Pubmed Identifier:
    21678185
    Pii Identifier:
    938640058
    Access state:
    Active

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    University researcher(s):

    Record metadata

    Manchester eScholar ID:
    uk-ac-man-scw:172924
    Created by:
    Mcgiveron, Kerrie
    Created:
    4th October, 2012, 10:21:58
    Last modified by:
    Mcgiveron, Kerrie
    Last modified:
    27th October, 2015, 10:08:07

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