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Sydney Health Literacy Lab Profile
Sydney Health Literacy Lab

@HealthLitLab

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Rigorous research, informed decisions and better health for diverse communities - Based in School of Public Health @Sydney_Uni

Sydney, New South Wales
Joined November 2014
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@syd_health
Sydney Health
4 days
Many Australians encounter health information that is hard to understand, with 6 in 10 adults struggling with common health tasks. A/Prof Danielle Muscat is working to ensure health information is clear, accessible and culturally appropriate. 🔗 https://t.co/ARBoQ4yPYm
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@eCentreClinic1
eCentreClinic
3 months
IN PRESS | @DrAlanaFisher et al's paper on #healthliteracy of ppl using unguided #iCBT for #depression/#anxiety. Despite diverse literacy challenges - esp. in often underserved groups - users engaged & benefited. 👉 https://t.co/IB659n5ebL @PsyMQ @Lifespan_MQ @HealthLitLab
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@wiserhealthcare
Wiser Healthcare
4 months
New paper: One-Page Patient Fact Sheets for Low Back Pain in Primary Care: A Randomized Clinical Trial What is the comparative effectiveness of 2 different fact sheets in preparing patients with low back pain for shared decision-making? https://t.co/kDrl9ME3JE #WiserHealthcare
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wiserhealthcare.org.au
Christian Longtin, Jeremy R. Chang, Jolyn Hersch, Sweekriti Sharma, Michael C. Ferraro, Rodrigo R. N. Rizzo, Jennifer McBride, Arnold Y. L. Wong, Chris G. Maher, Michelle Guppy, James H. McAuley &...
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@CroakeyNews
Croakey News
4 months
Better ways to communicate health messages to young people https://t.co/ROmJWXuhEy
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@MelissaSweetDr
Melissa Sweet
4 months
"Young people expect engaging and trending content on social media, even from public health agencies. Health communicators can collaborate with influencers, use humour, memes and trends that young people use." https://t.co/bR7RoF3VZv
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croakey.org
Introduction by Croakey: Social media is the main source of news for young people, according to the 2025 Australian Digital News Report,
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@CroakeyNews
Croakey News
4 months
Better ways to communicate health messages to young people https://t.co/ROmJWXuhEy #publichealth
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@sydFMH_EMCR
Sydney Health EMCR
4 months
ECR category winner Brooke Nickel Social media posts about medical tests with potential for overdiagnosis. JAMA Netw Open. (2025) 8(2):e2461940. https://t.co/2VvSYty7YU
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@sydFMH_EMCR
Sydney Health EMCR
4 months
Congratulations to the Winners of the 2025 Faculty of Medicine and Health Early to Mid-Career Researcher (EMCR) Outstanding Publication Awards!
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@melody_taba
Melody Taba
8 months
Our final 5 recommendations for social media health communication to young people are:   1️⃣ Involve young people 🤝 2️⃣ Pitch at right level ✅ 3️⃣ Capture attention fast‼️ 4️⃣ Use current social media marketing 🤠 5️⃣ Engage more with the public 🤳🏽 🔗: https://t.co/ESOplIRa1k
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@melody_taba
Melody Taba
8 months
We used #ParticipatoryActionResearch methods for this project, and partnered with 3 youth co-researchers, who helped facilitate and analyse the 3 #codesign workshops with young people and health communicators.   The 5 recommendations were finalised after multiple iterations…
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@melody_taba
Melody Taba
8 months
🎉 New PhD paper out now!   We co-designed 5 recommendations with young people and health communicators for social media health communication to young people!   Read the full article https://t.co/ESOplIRa1k 🧵for more ⬇️
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onlinelibrary.wiley.com
Background Social media became a key communication channel for public health agencies during the COVID-19 pandemic, especially for reaching younger populations less engaged with traditional channel...
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@Mozziebites
Dr Cameron Webb
8 months
“By incorporating a variety of messaging approaches and actively involving young people in content development, public health agencies can better reach and engage young people, including during public health emergencies.” Nice work @melody_taba and team! #publichealth
@melody_taba
Melody Taba
8 months
🎉 New PhD paper out now!   We co-designed 5 recommendations with young people and health communicators for social media health communication to young people!   Read the full article https://t.co/ESOplIRa1k 🧵for more ⬇️
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@melody_taba
Melody Taba
8 months
Finally submitted my PhD after 3.5 years of study! Super grateful to my @HealthLitLab supervisory dream team for supporting my research on social media health communication to young people 🥹 #PhDone (more or less 🤫)
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@ConversationEDU
The Conversation - Australia + New Zealand
8 months
87% of posts mentioned the benefits of the tests, while only 15% mentioned potential harms. @brooke_nickel @zadro_josh @BondUniversity @Sydney_Uni
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theconversation.com
87% of posts mentioned the benefits of the tests, while only 15% mentioned potential harms.
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@pash22
Ash Paul
8 months
Social media influencers are ‘fearmongering’ to promote health tests with limited evidence, @brooke_nickel study finds: Researchers warn of harms of overdiagnosis for generally healthy people as well as the cost of tests themselves https://t.co/XnLqpMP5HV via @natasha__may
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theguardian.com
Researchers warn of harms of overdiagnosis for generally healthy people as well as the cost of tests themselves
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@CaulfieldTim
Timothy Caulfield
8 months
SO MUCH "testing" hype now. This can do harm. Social Media Posts About Medical Tests With Potential for Overdiagnosis https://t.co/V3r2LlEmiW - 87.1% mentioned benefits - 14.7% noted harms, - 6.1% noted overdiagnosis [Read: you don't need that full-body MRI!]
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jamanetwork.com
This cross-sectional study examines the tone and content of social media posts that discuss popular medical tests with potential for overdiagnosis or overuse.
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@melody_taba
Melody Taba
10 months
Opportunity to get involved in health research! We’re looking for new members to join the Sydney Health Literacy Lab Consumer Panel (Co-SHeLL) for 2025! If you’re passionate about making health info easier to understand or have ideas on improving health systems, learn more ⬇️
@HealthLitLab
Sydney Health Literacy Lab
10 months
Interested in shaping the future of health research? Join the Sydney Health Literacy Lab Consumer Panel (Co-SHeLL) and help us in our research! If you're a patient, consumer or community member, we'd love to hear from you. Learn more: https://t.co/rZJU5AtCiH
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@HealthLitLab
Sydney Health Literacy Lab
10 months
Interested in shaping the future of health research? Join the Sydney Health Literacy Lab Consumer Panel (Co-SHeLL) and help us in our research! If you're a patient, consumer or community member, we'd love to hear from you. Learn more: https://t.co/rZJU5AtCiH
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@HealthLitLab
Sydney Health Literacy Lab
10 months
And read Karen's paper ‘Are plain language summaries published in health journals written according to instructions and health literacy principles? A systematic environmental scan' here:
bmjopen.bmj.com
Background Plain language summaries (PLSs) are easy-to-understand summaries of research articles that should follow principles of plain language and health literacy. PLS author instructions from...
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