At CEDAR we’re producing a series of Evidence Briefs: succinct summaries of our research findings. We want to hear your views about how documents like this might be made most effective in supporting decision making within policy and practice.We know that there can be gaps between the evidence that individual studies are able to generate […]
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CEDAR Bulletin Spring/Summer 2012 – out now
The spring/summer 2012 edition of CEDAR Bulletin is out now. You can read it here, and sign up for future issues.This issue includes: CEDAR Evidence Briefing: supporting physical activity in schools Join us for a research translation conference New online publications database CEDAR – read all about us! Baby Milk Study gets NPRI funding Draft […]
Baby Milk Study – larger study seeks 700 babies
Following on from the successful pilot, the Baby Milk Study from CEDAR and the MRC Epidemiology Unit in Cambridge has been awarded a grant by the National Prevention Research Initiative to recruit 700 babies to the study.Researchers have been working with mothers and healthcare professionals to develop a feeding programme which aims to avoid excess […]
Capacity, research, translation – a year in CEDAR
You can now read all about a year in CEDAR in our January 2012 brochure. This features news, case studies and future plans from the Centre for Diet and Activity Research. Click the image below to read the pdf. If you would like any hard copies of this A5 document, please contact Oliver Francis on ocf26@medschl.cam.ac.uk […]
Get active and learn about public health
The Institute of Public Health, which hosts CEDAR, has created a great way to get active and learn about public health. They have teamed up with Stride Design, a Cambridge web design company, to create the guided walk revealing 800 years and death and disease in Cambridge. It’s an unusual topic, but one that tells […]
Interventions to promote cycling – a systematic review
Community-wide promotional activities, improving cycle routes and targeted marketing to households all have the potential to increase cycling in the population, finds a study published by the British Medical Journal on 19 October. This could make a valuable contribution to improving public health.There is a strong case for promoting cycling on health grounds, write Lin […]
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