8 results match your criteria: "and Victoria University of Wellington[Affiliation]"
Ther Adv Respir Dis
May 2024
BioPharmaceuticals Research and Development, AstraZeneca, Durham, NC, USA.
This summary describes the results of a clinical study called MANDALA that was published in the in 2022. In the MANDALA study, researchers looked at a new asthma rescue inhaler that contains both and in a single inhaler (known as , AIRSUPRA™). This summary describes the results for people aged 18 yearsand older who took part in the study.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Prim Health Care
September 2021
School of Nursing, Massey University, Palmerston North, New Zealand.
INTRODUCTION Establishing the nurse practitioner (NP) workforce in New Zealand is a viable solution to health and workforce challenges in primary health care. General practices have been slow to implement NP services. Managers of general practices are central to the employment and development of NP roles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGames Health J
August 2020
School of Psychology, Victoria University of Wellington, Wellington, New Zealand.
Despite the variety of available treatments for mental health symptoms, many individuals do not engage with treatment and among those who do, dropout rates are often high. Therefore, providing alternative opportunities to access treatment is imperative. Research interest in the therapeutic effects of digital mental health initiatives and serious games has grown in recent years, but the potential of simple, easy-to-use casual videogames (CVGs) that can be played in short bursts of time has seldom been considered.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
July 2016
Greater Wellington Regional Council and Victoria University of Wellington, Wellington, New Zealand.
This paper highlights some caveats in using composite analyses to form physical hypotheses on the associations between environmental variables. This is illustrated using a specific example, namely the apparent links between heat waves (HWs) and sea surface temperatures (SSTs). In this case study, a composite analysis is performed to show the large-scale and regional SST conditions observed during summer HWs in Perth, southwest Australia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Epidemiol Community Health
December 2015
NZ Centre for Sustainable Cities, and School of Population Health, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand.
Background: There is increased interest in the effectiveness and co-benefits of measures to promote walking and cycling, including health gains from increased physical activity and reductions in fossil fuel use and vehicle emissions. This paper analyses the changes in walking and cycling in two New Zealand cities that accompanied public investment in infrastructure married with programmes to encourage active travel.
Method: Using a quasi-experimental two-group pre-post study design, we estimated changes in travel behaviour from baseline in 2011 to mid-programme in 2012, and postprogramme in 2013.
BMC Public Health
September 2014
NZ Centre for Sustainable Cities, and Victoria University of Wellington, Environmental Studies Programme, SGEES, P,O, Box 600, Wellington, New Zealand.
Background: Policy advisers are seeking robust evidence on the effectiveness of measures, such as promoting walking and cycling, that potentially offer multiple benefits, including enhanced health through physical activity, alongside reductions in energy use, traffic congestion and carbon emissions. This paper outlines the 'ACTIVE' study, designed to test whether the Model Communities Programme in two New Zealand cities is increasing walking and cycling. The intervention consists of the introduction of cycle and walkway infrastructure, along with measures to encourage active travel.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFContemp Nurse
April 2007
Waikato District Health Board and Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand.
In this paper the authors draw attention to the value of nurse dignity in the work-life of nurses. How does the profession currently understand this as a concept and construct? How might the valuing of worker dignity in the workplace affect the wellbeing of the workforce? A review of nursing literature and a theoretical lens on worker dignity derived from recent work by Hodson (2001) was used to explore these questions. In the context of current and international workforce issues associated with recruitment and retention, analysis of the construct of worker dignity within the profession takes on a strong imperative.
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