How to get to people moving? with Dr Andrew Brinkley

How to get to people moving? with Dr Andrew Brinkley

By University Centre at Eastern Education Group

A brief overview on the approaches and latest research to changing people’s behaviour in a sedentary age.

Date and time

Location

University and Professional Development Centre

73 Western Way Bury St Edmunds IP33 3SP United Kingdom

Good to know

Highlights

  • 1 hour, 15 minutes
  • In person
  • Free venue parking

About this event

Health • Personal health

How to get people moving? With Dr Andrew Brinkley

Amid growing concerns about national fitness and media panics over weight loss drugs, this talk explores the latest research on changing public behaviour to improve health. From simple approaches to complex interventions, discover how these findings are applied in Suffolk, touching on sports psychology, public policy, and health.

Dr Andrew Brinkley is a Lecturer in Exercise Psychology within the School of Sport, Rehabilitation, and Exercise Sciences at the University of Essex, a Chartered Psychologist (CPsychol), and the Programme Lead for BSc (Hons) Sport and Exercise Psychology. Before his appointment, he worked as a Research Associate at Loughborough University within the NCSEM and as a Lecturer in Sport and Exercise Psychology at Loughborough College. Using a mixed-methods approach and across the life course, Andrew’s research addresses how complex and systems-based physical activity interventions and programmes can be developed, implemented, and evaluated. He has a particular interest in behavioural science and systems-thinking methods and evaluation. Examples of his work include workplace sports and exercise interventions designed to improve employee and organisational health, programmes developed to improve educational and social outcomes in young people educated within pupil referral units, nationwide Walking Netball programmes established to improve quality of life, loneliness, and mental health, place-based public health programmes in Essex, and whole-systems physical activity projects. Across a variety of settings, Andrew is interested in how real-world physical activity interventions and programmes underpinned by behaviour-change theory and systems-thinking can be effectively evaluated and translated into practice and policy. He has published his work in leading journals and presented his research at conferences and to the population it seeks to serve through research consortiums and public engagement events.

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Free
Nov 6 · 17:45 GMT