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Translations of The Behaviour Change Wheel

Japanese

DutchÌý

Publications citing The Behaviour Change Wheel (BCW)

To view the peer-review publication citing The Behaviour Change Wheel: a new method for characterising and designing behaviour change interventions. Michie S, van Stralen M, West R. Imp Sci, 2011, 6: 42, DOI: 10.1186/1748-5908-6-42. click on the attachment available below.

Downloaded from Web of Science June 2023Ìý(n=2,500):Ìý

BCW Citation 2023

Improving people’s health: applying behavioural and social sciences

Improving people's health logo
was published by the Campaign for the Social Sciences to enable the broad public health system to use behavioural and social sciences. It was developed by a collaboration of academics, public health professionals and representatives from funders and learned bodies, chaired by Professor Susan Michie.
The Cochrane Library

is a collection of six databases that contain different types of high-quality, independent evidence to inform healthcare decision-making and a seventh database that provides information about groups in The Cochrane Collaboration.

NICE Evidence Search

are a suite of services that provide internet access to high-qualityÌýauthoritative evidence and best practice. The services cover health, social care and public health evidence. Evidence Services aim to help professionals make better and quicker evidence-based decisions.

AllTrials

The is an initiative of Bad Science, the BMJ, Centre for Evidence-based Medicine, Cochrane Collaboration, James Lind Initiative, PLOS and Sense About Science and is being led in the US by Dartmouth's Geisel School of Medicine and the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice. The AllTrials campaign was launched in January 2013 and calls for all past and present clinical trials to be registered and their results reported. The campaign has published a detailed plan on how all clinical trials can be registered and all results reported.

NICE Guidance

sets the standards for high quality healthcare and encourages healthy living. NICE Guidance can be used by the NHS, Local Authorities, employers, voluntary groups and anyone else involved in delivering care or promoting wellbeing.

CONSORT Guidelines

, encompasses various initiatives developed by the CONSORT Group to alleviate the problems arising from inadequate reporting of randomized controlled trials (RCTs). The main product of CONSORT is the CONSORT Statement, which is an evidence-based, minimum set of recommendations for reporting RCTs. It offers a standard way for authors to prepare reports of trial findings, facilitating their complete and transparent reporting, and aiding their critical appraisal and interpretation.

CONSORT is part of a broader push to produce reporting guidelines (RGs) for many different types of research.

References
Montgomery P, Grant S, Mayo-Wilson E, Macdonald G, Michie S, Hopewell S, Moher D.

Grant S, Mayo-Wilson E, Montgomery P, Macdonald G, Michie S, Hopewell S, Moher D.

Better reporting of interventions: Template for Intervention Description and Replication (TIDieR) checklist and guide

Without a complete published description of interventions, clinicians and patients cannot reliably implement interventions that are shown to be useful, and other researchers cannot replicate or build on research findings. The quality of description of interventions in publications, however, is remarkably poor. To improve the completeness of reporting, and ultimately the replicability, of interventions, an international group of experts and stakeholders developed the .

Reference

Hoffmann TC, Glasziou PP, Boutron I, Milne R, Perera R, Moher D, Altman DG, Barbour V, Macdonald H, Johnston M, Lamb SE, Dixon-Woods M, McCulloch P, Wyatt JC, Chan A-W, Michie SÌý

Human Behaviour Change Project (HBCP)

Ìýallows users to learn more about the project, access resources and open-source tools, use theÌýBehaviour Change Intervention Ontology in their work, get training, and much more.

Ìýprovides detailed information about ontologies in general and the BCIO in particular, how to use and contribute to the BCIO, and allows users to search and visualise the BCIO using online, open-access tools.

.ÌýFrom March to May 2023, the HBCP aired a 14-part live and interactive webinar series that covered key aspects of the project, includingÌýapplying Artificial Intelligence to evidence identification, extraction and integration, using ontologies and behavioural prediction.

.ÌýThisÌý3-hour event, launched in June 2023 and attended by more than 250 people, introduced users to the HBCP Knowledge System and the tools for interacting with it.

Ìýis an online training course on the use of theÌýBehaviour Change Intervention OntologyÌýto supplement the guidance and information provided on the BCIO website. Each module consists of a video, a document with accompanying resources, and a short self-test quiz.

.ÌýThe Study Finding Tool is updated regularly to include published reports of RCTs of smoking cessation interventions.ÌýThe Research Browser Tool allows users to search a database of smoking cessation intervention evaluation reports more precisely and completely than is possible using other search tools. It uses the Behaviour Change Intervention Ontology to structure queries and locate relevant evaluation reports.

Ìýallows users to explore theÌýBehaviour Change Intervention OntologyÌýand to search for specific entities. For each entity, it shows its parent classes and subclasses. It shows fields relating to the entity, including informal definitions and elaborations.

Ìýshows how different entities in theÌýBehaviour Change Intervention OntologyÌýrelate to each other. It includes all the relationships that have been specified between entities.

uses semantically-enhanced Machine Learning to predict smoking cessation rates in scenarios specified by users.

Ìýis an online tool for writing reports of randomised trials that ensures all the relevant information is included and specified in a way that allows for comparison across studies. It provides a facility to specify information using ontologies such as theÌýBehaviour Change Intervention OntologyÌýso that it is computer-readable.

ÌýlinksÌýBehaviour Change Techniques with their potential mechanisms of action using the Behaviour Change Technique Taxonomy v1.

Ìýcontains a set of resources to support people to critically question the use of an Artificial Intelligence (AI) system. The resources can be used to help people decide how much they want public health decision makers to trust an AI system.

Translation of the BCTTv1

Translating the Behavior Change Technique Taxonomy version 1 into Spanish: Methodology and Validation(Preprint)

BCTTv1 Final Translated Version in Spanish

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