Rachel E. F. Marsden's research while affiliated with Sheffield Hallam University and other places

What is this page?


This page lists the scientific contributions of an author, who either does not have a ResearchGate profile, or has not yet added these contributions to their profile.

It was automatically created by ResearchGate to create a record of this author's body of work. We create such pages to advance our goal of creating and maintaining the most comprehensive scientific repository possible. In doing so, we process publicly available (personal) data relating to the author as a member of the scientific community.

If you're a ResearchGate member, you can follow this page to keep up with this author's work.

If you are this author, and you don't want us to display this page anymore, please let us know.

Publications (1)


Demographics of children
Parent Use of CAM and use of GFCF Diets for their Child
Elicited salient positive and negative outcome beliefs (Behavioural Beliefs)
Mean Scores and Standard Deviations From the Five Factors of the LBA-Q
Theory of Planned Behaviour: predictors of intentions and behaviour. *Variables in red depict extensions
Use of GFCF Diets in Children with ASD. An Investigation into Parents’ Beliefs Using the Theory of Planned Behaviour
  • Article
  • Full-text available

September 2019

·

91 Reads

·

6 Citations

Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders

Rachel E. F. Marsden

·

John Francis

·

Gluten free/Casein free (GFCF) diets are one of the most common types of Complementary and Alternative Medicines (CAM) used in Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD) despite little evidence to support positive effects. There has been no theory driven literature that has investigated parent’s reasons for their use. The Theory of Planned Behaviour (TPB) was used to examine parent’s intentions to use GFCF diets for their child with an ASD. Treatment and causal beliefs were also examined. Parents (n = 33, children aged 3–17 years) were influenced by anticipated regret, positive outcomes and attitude. Future interventions should provide information to parents and health professionals about the possible causes of ASD and therapy options which are in line with current recommendations.

Download
Share

Citations (1)


... ese mental nonadherence phenotypes highlighted explanatory factors such as health literacy, education, socioeconomic status, cognitive abilities, and reasoning patterns of nonadhering patients [8][9][10][11]. By contrast, researchers studying medication adherence presented evidence which demonstrates the impact of a variety of factors found to be positively associated with medication adherence: health locus of control (belief that health is in one's own control), health literacy, language, cultural backgrounds, and so on [12][13][14][15][16][17][18][19][20][21][22]. ...

Reference:

Probabilistic Prediction of Nonadherence to Psychiatric Disorder Medication from Mental Health Forum Data: Developing and Validating Bayesian Machine Learning Classifiers
Use of GFCF Diets in Children with ASD. An Investigation into Parents’ Beliefs Using the Theory of Planned Behaviour

Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders