Few people living with and beyond cancer meet current exercise recommendationsDenise Spector15 September 2014
Adding very low nicotine content cigarettes to nicotine replacement therapy and behavioural support increases abstinence at 6 months after the quit dateSharon Cummins10 December 2013
Sunbed use increases risk of melanoma; risk increases with greater number of sessions and first use at younger ageVeronique Bataille7 September 2013
Mobile phone-based smoking cessation interventions increase long-term quit rates compared with control programmes, but effects of the interventions are heterogeneousWilliam Riley, Erik M Augustson7 September 2013
In smokers who lapse during nicotine patch treatment, continued patch use increases the likelihood of recovering abstinenceTim Coleman8 March 2013
One-on-one education and client reminders increase uptake of colorectal, breast and cervical cancer screeningKathleen Griffith8 March 2013
Breastfeeding duration not associated with average adiposity levels in 6-year-olds to 13-year-olds, but adequate breastfeeding may be associated with lower adiposity in the upper percentilesGarth Edward Kendall4 December 2012
Physical training is well tolerated, leads to improvements in cardiopulmonary fitness and is not associated with adverse outcomes in people with asthmaShilpa Dogra4 December 2012
Smoking cessation for hospitalised patients: intensive behavioural counselling started in hospital and continued after discharge increases quit rates; with additional benefit from adding nicotine replacement therapyJennifer Bowman, Emily Alice Stockings4 December 2012
People with unhealthy lifestyle behaviours benefit from remote coaching via mobile technologyFaryle Nothwehr4 December 2012