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Featured researches published by Audrey Marshall.


Journal of Information Literacy | 2009

Information to fight the flab: findings from the Net.Weight Study

Audrey Marshall; Flis Henwood; Leslie Carlin; Elizabeth S. Guy; Tanja Sinozic; Helen Smith

The purpose of the paper is to examine information use and information literacy in the context of weight management. It reports on a two-year study funded by the Department of Health known informally as the Net.Weight Study. Net.Weight examined the potential for increased, innovative and effective uses of information and communication technologies (ICTs) to support the self management of weight. The research was conducted in the city of Brighton & Hove by an inter-disciplinary team from the University of Brighton. The paper gives a brief overview of the various methods used in the study as a whole but discusses one strand, the user survey, in more detail. The survey gathered data on people’s information and ICT use around weight management. The design of the survey questionnaire required the adaptation of existing literacy assessment instruments and this process is described in this paper. The findings show that people use a wide range of information sources for information and support around weight management. The most useful sources are slimming groups, food packaging, friends and family, magazines, TV and health books, thus representing a variety of media, formal and informal, and including human sources. The internet was reported to be a useful source for around half the survey respondents and is most often used for information about diet and exercise. A majority of respondents described themselves as active information seekers and confident about their information skills. They are less confident about internet information than information generally and even less confident about using the internet to support weight management activities. The concept of literacies, particularly around information and health, provide a framework for examining the Net.Weight findings. The findings are discussed in terms of their implications for health information policy and for those interested in applying information literacy theory to health. The role of healthcare practitioners in weight management information is addressed, as is the need for targeted rather than generic health information. It is suggested that the work done in the education sector to increase awareness of information literacy and improve skills could provide a useful model of good practice in a health context. However, the evidence provided by the Net.Weight study suggests that for such an approach to be relevant it needs to reflect the complexity of health information processes in everyday lives.


Library Trends | 2012

Information and Health Literacy in the Balance: Findings from a Study Exploring the Use of ICTs in Weight Management

Audrey Marshall; Flis Henwood; Elizabeth S. Guy

This article uses findings from a UK Department of Health funded research study known as Net.Weight to reflect on the concept of information literacy as it relates to consumer health. It explores how the results support and develop an understanding of information and health literacy and it offers recommendations for policy and practice. The study was located in the city of Brighton & Hove and examined the potential for information and communication technologies (ICTs) to support people who were self-managing their weight. The research comprised five interlocking components, at the heart of which was a series of participatory learning workshops designed to develop participant skills in relation to ICTs, information, and health literacy. The results indicate that a broader and more social understanding of information literacy is needed to ensure a better “fit” between the provision and use of health information. They also indicate that ICTs can augment information provision and support activities, but that a “blended” approach is necessary, where online and “real world” communication work in tandem.


Archive | 2010

Working (IT) out together: engaging the community in e-health developments for obesity management

Flis Henwood; Leslie Carlin; Elizabeth S. Guy; Audrey Marshall; Helen Smith

In this chapter, we combine sociological research on the ‘e-society’ and the ‘new public health’, to offer a critique of ‘e-health discourse’. Central to this discourse is the association of greater availability of information and information and communication technologies (ICTs) with notions of patient empowerment and the ability to engage more actively in self care. Drawing on an action-oriented research project exploring and intervening in the lived experience of those seeking to manage their weight, we employ a Foucauldian notion of discourse and of knowledge/power to reflect upon the sociotechnical configurations that constitute self care in the context of obesity management.


Libri | 2010

In the Balance: Report of a Research Study Exploring Information for Weight Management

Audrey Marshall; Flis Henwood; Leslie Carlin; Elizabeth S. Guy; Helen Smith

Abstract This paper uses findings from a research study called Net.Weight to examine the concepts of interaction, information quality and Internet-based information from the perspective of people engaged in managing their weight. The Net.Weight study was a two-year project funded by the British governments Department of Health and located in the city of Brighton and Hove. It examined the potential for increased, innovative and effective uses of information and communication technologies (ICTs) to support the self management of weight. The study had several inter-related research strands and the findings discussed in the paper emerged primarily from participatory learning workshops and evaluative interviews. The paper demonstrates that the interaction between people is an important aspect of the information process, which is often neglected in the literature. It suggests that exploring the user-user dimension might add to the understanding of information effectiveness. It also suggests that an approach to information and health literacy which includes a social as well as an individual perspective is necessary. On quality assessment, it supports findings from other studies that organisational authority is a key measure of reliability for lay users and that quality assessment tools have a limited role in the assessment process. The Net.Weight participants embraced the Internet as a medium for weight management information only when it added value to their existing information and weight management practices and when it could be integrated into their everyday lives.


Archive | 2008

Health Intermediaries? Positioning the Public Library in e-Health Discourse

Flis Henwood; Roma Harris; Samantha Burdett; Audrey Marshall

Much existing policy and literature on public libraries and health information seeking is framed, implicitly at least, within ‘e-health’ discourse, which understands health information as empowering and the internet as a tool for accessing that information. In this discourse, public libraries are understood as key intermediaries of health information, offering both specialist services in information retrieval and free access to the internet for consumer-citizens who are active and responsible information seekers. Through an exploration of the practices involved in supporting health information-seeking practices in the public library context,1 this chapter analyses how understanding e-health discourse can help us make sense of the specific sociotechnical configuration set up in the public library to support these practices. The analysis draws on the circuit of culture model (du Gay et al., 1997) to explore and understand how the public library is represented in e-health discourse; what identities or ‘subject positions’ are produced for both library staff and users within this discourse and the relationship between production and consumption activities, what we might think of as the mediating processes involved in e-health practices in the public library.


Health Information and Libraries Journal | 2016

Are you a budding academic writer

Maria J. Grant; Penny Bonnett; Anthea Sutton; Audrey Marshall; Jeannette Murphy; Hannah Spring

Academic writing can seem a daunting prospect although with the right support and information it can be more achievable than you think. In this first set of editorial comments of 2016, editors from all sections of the Health Information and Libraries Journal outline the origins of the individual section of the journal which they oversee and highlight some of the things you might want to consider when thinking of submitting your writing for publication.


Reference and User Services Quarterly | 2010

“I’m not sure if that’s what their job is”: consumer health information and emerging “healthwork” roles in the public library

Roma Harris; Flis Henwood; Audrey Marshall; Samantha Burdett


Health Information and Libraries Journal | 2012

Calling All Students

Audrey Marshall


Health Information and Libraries Journal | 2015

The story so far: a summary of the contributions to the ‘Dissertations into practice’ feature

Audrey Marshall


Library and Information Research | 2008

Informing Health: a participative approach to health information provision

Audrey Marshall; Flis Henwood

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Helen Smith

Nanyang Technological University

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Roma Harris

University of Western Ontario

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Samantha Burdett

University of Western Ontario

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Laura Banks

University of Brighton

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