Development of The COMBINED approach: Integrating a brief behaviour change intervention su
by Julie Bury·Updated 3d ago
1.3 MB2files
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Description
Julie Bury developed a behavior change intervention for rotator cuff disorders, published on figshare in June 2026. The 1.3 MB dataset comprises research documents detailing the development of an approach integrating brief interventions targeting smoking, inactivity, and weight management into routine physiotherapy consultations. It was created through a process involving a narrative review, co-design workshops with 26 stakeholders, and theoretical modeling using COM-B, TDF, and BCTTv1 frameworks.
Use Cases
Modeling barriers and facilitators to behavior change in clinical settings based on the COM-B and TDF frameworks mentioned.
Designing training materials for physiotherapists based on the described clinician-level implementation toolkit.
Developing patient-facing resources for lifestyle modification based on the adapted Moving Medicine brief intervention.
Evaluating the feasibility of embedding brief interventions into routine musculoskeletal care consultations.
Strengths
Development involved co-design with 26 stakeholders, including physiotherapists, patients, and experts.
Theoretical foundation is explicitly detailed, using COM-B, TDF, and BCTTv1 frameworks.
The intervention prototype was informed by a review of 14 identified brief interventions and 20 selected behavior change techniques.
Limitations
Row count is unknown, which may limit suitability assessment.
Column-level documentation is absent; field semantics must be inferred after download.
The dataset consists of PDF and DOCX files (1.3 MB total), suggesting it is documentation rather than structured data.
Provenance
Source
figshare
Collection Method
Theory-, evidence-, and pragmatic-based development process incorporating stakeholder co-design, behavioral theory, and narrative review.
Freshness
Last updated 2026-06-02 16:10:53; freshness should be verified.
License is CC-BY-4.0. Primary content is in PDF and DOCX formats, requiring appropriate software for viewing.