27 results match your criteria: "University of the West of England UWE Bristol[Affiliation]"

Should we use a direct regulation to implement the Healthy Prisons Agenda in England? A qualitative study among prison key policy makers.

J Public Health (Oxf)

September 2018

Department of Health and Social Sciences, University of the West of England (UWE Bristol), Coldharbour Lane, Frenchay Campus, Stoke Gifford, Bristol, UK.

Background: The Healthy Prisons Agenda seeks to reduce prisoners' health risks, balance prisoners' rights with a security regime, ensure equivalent prison health service provisions to community health services, and facilitate the whole-prison approach. There is an established assumption that legislation will ensure better implementation of health promotion programmes. This study aimed to examine whether a legislative framework, via a direct regulation, could lead to enhanced implementation of the Healthy Prisons Agenda in England.

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Effects of valent image-based secondary tasks on verbal working memory.

Q J Exp Psychol (Hove)

June 2018

2 Psychological Sciences Research Group, Department of Health and Social Sciences, University of the West of England (UWE) - Bristol, Frenchay Campus, Bristol, UK.

Two experiments examined if exposure to emotionally valent image-based secondary tasks introduced at different points of a free recall working memory (WM) task impair memory performance. Images from the International Affective Picture System (IAPS) varied in the degree of negative or positive valance (mild, moderate, strong) and were positioned at low, moderate and high WM load points with participants rating them based upon perceived valence. As predicted, and based on previous research and theory, the higher the degree of negative (Experiment 1) and positive (Experiment 2) valence and the higher the WM load when a secondary task was introduced, the greater the impairment to recall.

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