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Dive into the research topics where E. van Beurden is active.

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Featured researches published by E. van Beurden.


Pediatrics | 2009

Young Driver Education Programs That Build Resilience Have Potential to Reduce Road Crashes

Teresa Senserrick; Rebecca Ivers; Soufiane Boufous; Huei-Yang Chen; Robyn Norton; Mark Stevenson; E. van Beurden; Avigdor Zask

OBJECTIVE: The research aimed to explore associations between participation in 2 education programs for school-based learner drivers and subsequent road traffic offenses and crashes among a large cohort of newly licensed drivers. METHODS: DRIVE is a prospective cohort study of 20822 first-year drivers aged 17 to 24 in New South Wales (NSW), Australia. Participants completed a detailed questionnaire and consented to data linkage in 2003–2004. Questionnaire items included year of participation in 2 specific education programs: a 1-day workshop-only program focusing on driving risks (“driver-focused”) and a whole-of-community program also including a 1-day workshop but also longer term follow-up activities and a broader focus on reducing risk-taking and building resilience (“resilience-focused”). Survey data were subsequently linked to police-reported crash and offense data for 1996–2005. Poisson regression models that adjusted for multiple confounders were created to explore offenses and crashes as a driver (dichotomized as 0 vs ≥1) after program participation. RESULTS: Offenses did not differ between groups; however, whereas the driver-focused program was not associated with reduced crash risk, the resilience-focused program was associated with a 44% reduced relative risk for crash (0.56 [95% confidence interval: 0.34–0.93]). CONCLUSIONS: The large effect size observed and complementary findings from a comparable randomized, controlled trial in the United States suggest programs that focus more generally on reducing risks and building resilience have the potential to reduce crashes. A large, representative, randomized, controlled trial is urgently needed to confirm road safety benefits and ensure evidence-based spending and practitioner recommendations in this field.


Journal of Science and Medicine in Sport | 2002

How active are rural children in Australian physical education

Lisa M. Barnett; E. van Beurden; Avigdor Zask; Lyndon O Brooks; Uta C Dietrich

Physical education lessons offer a venue for children to accrue valuable and health-conferring time being physically active. The first Australian direct observational data are presented on activity of year 3 and 4 children during physical education. Analysis accounts for the nested nature of the data through multi level logistic regression using 13,080 records within 231 lessons within 18 randomly selected schools. Activity was analysed in relation to lesson context (focus of lesson), child gender, school year of child, teacher gender, lesson duration and start time. Children spent 36.7% of a lesson in moderate to vigorous and 12.9% in vigorous activity. Most of the lesson was spent in the context of management/instruction (37.4%), followed by games (25.0%), skill (21.4%), and fitness (14.7%). The highest level of moderate to vigorous activity was observed in the fitness lesson context (61.9%). followed by skill (46.4%), games (42.6%) and management/instruction (17.1%). Moderate to vigorous activity was significantly higher for boys than girls. There was no significant difference in moderate to vigorous activity in lessons led by male or female teachers. However vigorous activity was significantly higher for female led lessons. Children participated in less physical activity during physical education lessons timetabled in the afternoon, compared to physical education lessons time-tabled in the morning. Physical activity levels were not related to lesson duration. Physical education lessons can potentially be more active. However improvement rests on school capacity and may require a health promoting schools approach to implement curricular policy.


Preventive Medicine | 2003

Can we skill and activate children through primary school physical education lessons? "Move it Groove it"—a collaborative health promotion intervention

E. van Beurden; Lisa M. Barnett; Avigdor Zask; Uta C Dietrich; Lyndon O Brooks; John L. Beard


Preventive Medicine | 2001

Active school playgrounds - myth or reality? Results of the "Move It Groove It" project

Avigdor Zask; E. van Beurden; Lisa M. Barnett; Lyndon O Brooks; Uta C Dietrich


Journal of Science and Medicine in Sport | 2002

Fundamental movement skills--how do primary school children perform? The 'Move it Groove it' program in rural Australia.

E. van Beurden; Avigdor Zask; Lisa M. Barnett; Uta C Dietrich


Health Promotion International | 2004

Program sustainability of a community-based intervention to prevent falls among older Australians

Lisa M. Barnett; E. van Beurden; Elizabeth G. Eakin; John L. Beard; Uta C Dietrich; Beth Newman


Public Health | 2006

Economic analysis of a community-based falls prevention program

John Beard; David Rowell; Don Scott; E. van Beurden; Lisa M. Barnett; Karen Hughes; Beth Newman


Health Promotion Journal of Australia | 2013

Smoking mull: a grounded theory model on the dynamics of combined tobacco and cannabis use among adult men

Annie Banbury; Avigdor Zask; Stacy M. Carter; E. van Beurden; R Tokley; Megan Passey; Jan Copeland


Journal of Science and Medicine in Sport | 2009

Does perceived sports competence mediate between childhood motor skill proficiency and adolescent physical activity

Lisa M. Barnett; Philip J. Morgan; E. van Beurden; John Beard


Pediatrics | 2010

Young Driver Education Programs That Build Resilience Have Potential to Reduce Road Crashes. Pediatrics. 2009;124(5):1287-1292

Teresa Senserrick; Rebecca Ivers; Soufiane Boufous; Huei-Yang Chen; Robyn Norton; Mark Stevenson; E. van Beurden; Avigdor Zask

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Beth Newman

Queensland University of Technology

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Karen Hughes

University of Queensland

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Avigdor Zask

Southern Cross University

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Uta C Dietrich

Southern Cross University

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John L. Beard

Pennsylvania State University

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Lyndon O Brooks

Southern Cross University

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John Beard

World Health Organization

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