Corneel Vandelanotte
Central Queensland University
321 Papers
663 Citations
Corneel Vandelanotte is an academic researcher from Central Queensland University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Psychological intervention. The author has an hindex of 50, co-authored 266 publications. Previous affiliations of Corneel Vandelanotte include University of Newcastle & University of Queensland.
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Papers
Depression, Anxiety and Stress during COVID-19: Associations with Changes in Physical Activity, Sleep, Tobacco and Alcohol Use in Australian Adults.
Robert Stanton,Quyen G. To,Saman Khalesi,Susan L. Williams,Stephanie Alley,Tanya L. Thwaite,Andrew Fenning,Corneel Vandelanotte +7 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the associations between psychological distress and changes in selected health behaviors since the onset of COVID-19 in Australia and found that negative changes in physical activity, sleep, smoking and alcohol intake were associated with higher depression, anxiety and stress symptoms.
1.3K
A meta-meta-analysis of the effect of physical activity on depression and anxiety in non-clinical adult populations
Amanda L. Rebar,Robert Stanton,David Geard,Camille E. Short,Mitch J. Duncan,Corneel Vandelanotte +5 more
TL;DR: The findings of this meta-meta-analysis represent a comprehensive body of high-quality evidence that physical activity reduces depression and anxiety in non-clinical populations.
1K
Efficacy of interventions that use apps to improve diet, physical activity and sedentary behaviour: a systematic review.
Stephanie Schoeppe,Stephanie Alley,Wendy Van Lippevelde,Nicola Bray,Susan L. Williams,Mitch J. Duncan,Corneel Vandelanotte +6 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a systematic review examined the efficacy of interventions that use apps to improve diet, physical activity and sedentary behaviour in children and adults in a randomized controlled trial and found that multi-component interventions appear to be more effective than stand-alone app interventions.
843
Are health behavior change interventions that use online social networks effective? A systematic review.
Carol Maher,Lucy K. Lewis,Katia Ferrar,Simon J. Marshall,Ilse De Bourdeaudhuij,Corneel Vandelanotte +5 more
TL;DR: There is very modest evidence that interventions incorporating online social networks may be effective; however, this field of research is in its infancy and further research is needed to determine how to maximize retention and engagement, whether behavior change can be sustained in the longer term, and how to exploit online social Networks to achieve mass dissemination.
710
Website-delivered physical activity interventions a review of the literature /
TL;DR: A little over half of the controlled trials of website-delivered physical activity interventions have reported positive behavioral outcomes, however, intervention effects were short lived, and there was limited evidence of maintenance of physical activity changes.
495