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Last year three students – Petya Zyumbileva (left), Magdalene Mawugbe (centre) and Sachi Chan (right) took the ‘Behavioural Science and Complex Intervention’ (BSCI) module, which can be taken as part of the MSc in Translational Health Sciences or as a standalone short course. During their studies, they learned how behavioural theories can inform the development of complex interventions. In this Q&A blog, Petya, Magdalene and Sachi share how this unique approach to behavioural science has altered their perspectives regarding behavioural interventions.

Petya Zyumbileva (left), Magdalene Mawugbe (centre) and Sachi Chan (right)
Petya Zyumbileva (left), Magdalene Mawugbe (centre) and Sachi Chan (right)

multivariate decomposition analysis of drivers of overweight and obesity among Ghanaian women

Journal article

Mensah JP. et al, (2026), Communications Medicine, 6

Viral cultures for assessing airborne infectiousness of SARS-CoV-2: a systematic review and meta-analysis

Journal article

Onakpoya IJ. et al, (2026), BMC Infectious Diseases, 26

Bridging the gap: a mixed-methods real-world pilot of a digital intervention for adults with binge eating

Journal article

Osborne EL. et al, (2026), Journal of Eating Disorders, 14

Telephone triage in urgent unscheduled primary care in 16 European countries: a cross-national questionnaire-based expert study

Journal article

Bergholdt Jul Christiansen I. et al, (2026), Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care, 44

Mapping the benefits and harms of antenatal and newborn screening programmes

Journal article

Hinton L. et al, (2026), Ssm Qualitative Research in Health, 9

Ten questions on indoor greening and environmental quality

Journal article

Kumar P. et al, (2026), Building and Environment, 294

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