Jonine Jancey
Curtin University
166 Papers
559 Citations
Jonine Jancey is an academic researcher from Curtin University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health promotion & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 24, co-authored 137 publications. Previous affiliations of Jonine Jancey include University of Western Australia.
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Papers
Review and recommendations for online physical activity and nutrition programmes targeted at over 40s.
TL;DR: Evidence to date suggests that the Internet is no more effective than print materials, face-to-face programmes and other health promotion methods, but several studies found positive short-term effects from using Internet-based programmes, including those aimed at the target group (40 years or more).
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Are Retirement Villages Promoting Active Aging
TL;DR: RV offers an attractive residential option with facilities that support active aging, but it is important to understand the barriers and enablers to use such facilities and attend programs offered.
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Development of a Systematic Review of Public Health Interventions to Prevent Children Drowning
Gemma Crawford,Justine E. Leavy,Linda Portsmouth,Jonine Jancey,Francene Leaversuch,Lauren Nimmo,Lauren Reid-Dornbusch,Emma Hills +7 more
TL;DR: A protocol for a review of drowning prevention interventions for children, which will map the types of interventions being implemented to prevent drowning amongst children and identify gaps within the literature.
The effectiveness of a walking booster program for seniors.
TL;DR: A home-based booster program can reactivate physical activity levels of seniors once an intervention concludes, and program planners should include booster sessions for program sustainability.
Psychotropic medications and crash risk in older drivers: a review of the literature.
TL;DR: Current evidence indicates that several types of psychotropic medications have the potential to impair driving ability and increase the risk of crash involvement, and large-scale, whole-population, epidemiological studies, such as data linkage studies, may be the optimal study design.
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