Breanna Wright
Monash University
38 Papers
77 Citations
Breanna Wright is an academic researcher from Monash University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Systematic review. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 28 publications. Previous affiliations of Breanna Wright include University of Virginia & Monash University, Clayton campus.
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Papers
Gendered stereotypes and norms: A systematic review of interventions designed to shift attitudes and behaviour.
TL;DR: A systematic review of interventions aiming to address gendered stereotypes and norms across several outcomes of gender inequality such as violence against women and sexual and reproductive health, to draw out common theory and practice and identify success factors is presented in this article.
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Support mechanisms and vulnerabilities in relation to PTSD in veterans of the Gulf War, Iraq War, and Afghanistan deployments: a systematic review
TL;DR: Posttrauma factors of low support were associated with higher reporting of PTSD, and cross-sectional methodology may be inadequate to capture complex relationships between support and PTSD; more longitudinal research is required.
81
Interventions to promote healthy eating choices when dining out: A systematic review of reviews.
Breanna Wright,Peter Bragge +1 more
TL;DR: The results indicate that policies or interventions that aim to improve healthy choices or consumption when dining out would benefit from harnessing social norms and positive positioning of social identity, and provision of health information should always be accompanied by an interpretative guide, such as traffic lights.
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What interventions could reduce diagnostic error in emergency departments? A review of evidence, practice and consumer perspectives.
Breanna Wright,Nicholas Faulkner,Peter Bragge,Mark A. Graber,Mark A. Graber +4 more
- 26 Nov 2019
TL;DR: Patients most favoured interventions that improved communication through education and patient engagement, while also suggesting that implementation of state-wide standards to reduce variability in care and sufficient staffing are important to address diagnostic errors.
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Major depression and depressive symptoms in Australian Gulf War veterans 20 years after the Gulf War.
Jill Ikin,Dean Philip McKenzie,Stella May Gwini,Helen L Kelsall,Mark Creamer,Alexander C. McFarlane,David M Clarke,Breanna Wright,Malcolm R Sim +8 more
TL;DR: More than 20 years after the Gulf War, veterans are experiencing slightly more severe depressive symptoms than a military comparison group, and depression continues to be associated with Gulf War-related stressors.
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