7th Annual Scientific Meeting (Stirling 2011, 13-14 December 2011)

Please note: this meeting has now passed.
The UK Society of Behavioural Medicine 7th Annual Scientific Meeting (2011) in association with the National Prevention Research Initiative (NPRI) Annual Scientific Meeting.
Theme: Motivating, enabling and prompting behaviour change for health
Held at Stirling Conference Centre (University of Stirling), Stirling, 13-14 December 2011
REGISTRATION NOW CLOSED
Conference proceedings
Proceedings from the 7th Annual Scientific Meeting in Stirling can now be downloaded (.pdf, 1.5 MB). ISBN 978-1-908063-10-6
Scientific and Local Organising Committee:
Gerry Molloy – Conference Chair
Ronan O’Carroll – UKSBM President
Maggie Cunningham, Lesley McGregor, Rory O’Connor, Vivien Swanson, Pam Warner,Helen Cheyne & Brian Williams.
NPRI: Marlie Ferenczi
Keynote speakers
- Professor Christopher Butler : Promoting behaviour change in primary care: clinical and research challenges
Head of Department, Department of Primary Care & Public Health, School of Medicine, Cardiff University. - Professor Kavita Vedhara : What has stress got to do with it…..?
Professor of Health Psychology, Institute of Work, Health & Organisations, Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences, University of Nottingham. - Professor David Blanchflower : Happiness, bio-markers and health
Professor of Economics, Department of Economics, Dartmouth College & Research Associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research, part-time professor at the University of Stirling, and a Research Fellow at the Centre for Economic Studies at the University of Munich and the Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA) at the University of Bonn. - Professor Theresa Marteau : The Automaticity of Being: Implications for Changing Behaviour to Improve Population Health
Director of the Behaviour and Health Research Unit at the Institute of Public Health, University of Cambridge & Professor of Health Psychology at King’s College London & Director of the Centre for the Study of Incentives in Health (with the London School of Economics and Queen Mary, University of London).