
Overview
Background
Genevieve is a Professor of Physical Activity and Health at the University of Queensland and an MRFF Emerging Leadership Fellow. Her research focuses on sedentary behaviour and physical activity in adults across the 24-hour day, including understanding impacts on health, wellbeing and performance, and the feasibility, acceptability and sustainability of modifying these behaviours in key settings and populations including desk-based workers and those with or at risk of type 2 diabetes. Co-design with stakeholders and end-users is embedded across her research program, which includes working with government, clinical, public health, private industry, not-for-profit, community and workplace partners in research and its’ translation into policy and practice. She leads the BeUpstanding program of research - an online workplace health and wellbeing initiative supporting teams of desk-based workers to reduce their sedentary time
Availability
- Professor Genevieve Healy is:
- Available for supervision
Fields of research
Qualifications
- Bachelor, The University of Queensland
- Bachelor (Honours), The University of Queensland
- Masters (Coursework) of Public Health, The University of Queensland
- Doctor of Philosophy, The University of Queensland
Research interests
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Measurement of sitting time
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Understanding population-level variations and influences on how and when we sit
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Understanding how sitting time is related to heart health
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Interventions to reduce and change sitting time
Research impacts
Professor Healy's work has influenced policy and guidelines regarding the importance of reducing and breaking up prolonged sedentary time. She was part of the development committee for the inaugural Canadian 24-hr Physical Activity Guidelines for Adults. The guidelines were the first in Canada to include specific recommendations on sedentary time and breaking up sedentary time,
Works
Search Professor Genevieve Healy’s works on UQ eSpace
2007
Conference Publication
Association of resistance exercise with impaired glucose metabolism in adults - a population-based study
Dunstan, D. W., Daly, R. M., Owen, N., Salmon, J., Healy, G. N., Hawley, J. A., Shaw, J. E., Jolley, D. and Zimmet, P. Z. (2007). Association of resistance exercise with impaired glucose metabolism in adults - a population-based study. American College of Sports Medicine 54th Annual Meeting, New Orleans, USA, 30 May - 2 June 2007.
2007
Conference Publication
Associations of sitting time with components of the metabolic syndrome in adults without diagnosed diabetes - the AusDiab study
Dunstan, D. W., Owen, N., Salmon, J., Healy, G. N., Ball, K., Shaw, J. E. and Zimmet, P. Z. (2007). Associations of sitting time with components of the metabolic syndrome in adults without diagnosed diabetes - the AusDiab study. 43rd annual meeting of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes, Amsterdam, The Netherlands, 17-21 September, 2007. Berlin / Heidelberg: Springer. doi: 10.1007/s00125-008-1117-6
2007
Conference Publication
Descriptive epidemiology of television viewing in Australian adults: Findings from the AusDiab study
Clark, B., Sugiyama, T., Healy, G. N. and Owen, N. (2007). Descriptive epidemiology of television viewing in Australian adults: Findings from the AusDiab study. Australian Conference on Science and Medicine in Sport, Adelaide, Australia, 13-16 October, 2007. Elsevier.
2007
Conference Publication
Physical activity, sedentary time and metabolic risk
Healy, G., Owen, N. and Dunstan, D. (2007). Physical activity, sedentary time and metabolic risk. AusDiab Annual Meeting, Melbourne, Australia, 6-7 December 2007.
2007
Conference Publication
Do Sitting and Exercise INDEPENDENTLY Predict the Incidence of the Metabolic Syndrome? Contrasting the independent biochemical and clinical effects of exercising too little with sitting too much on the metabolic syndrome: The emergence of inactivity physi
Healy, G. N. (2007). Do Sitting and Exercise INDEPENDENTLY Predict the Incidence of the Metabolic Syndrome? Contrasting the independent biochemical and clinical effects of exercising too little with sitting too much on the metabolic syndrome: The emergence of inactivity physi. American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM) 54th Annual Meeting, New Orleans, United States, 30 May - 2 June 2007. Philadelphia, PA, United States: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. doi: 10.1249/01.mss.0000272653.81423.60
2007
Conference Publication
Sedentary time (particularly TV time) influence metabolic risk
Dunstan, D., Owen, N., Salmon, J., Healy, G., Sugiyama, T., Clark, B. and Wijndaele, K. (2007). Sedentary time (particularly TV time) influence metabolic risk. AusDiab Behavioral Epidemiology Group Meeting, Melbourne, Australia, 9 November, 2007.
2007
Conference Publication
Association of resistance exercise with impaired glucose metabolism in adults - a population-based study
Dunstan, David W., Daly, Robin M., Owen, Neville, Salmon, Jo, Healy, Genevieve N., Hawley, John A., Shaw, Jonathan E., Jolley, Damien and Zimmet, Paul Z. (2007). Association of resistance exercise with impaired glucose metabolism in adults - a population-based study. American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM) 54th Annual Meeting, New Orleans, Louisiana, 30 May - 2 June 2007. Maryland, USA: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. doi: 10.1249/01.mss.0000273551.72678.b2
2007
Conference Publication
Abnormal Glucose Metabolism: Does Diet Interact with Sedentary Behaviour? The AusDiab Study
Reeves, Marina, Healy, Genevieve, Khan, Tanya, Dunstan, David, Shaw, Jonathan, Zimmet, Paul and Owen, Neville (2007). Abnormal Glucose Metabolism: Does Diet Interact with Sedentary Behaviour? The AusDiab Study. Dietitians Association of Australia 25th National Conference:' Crunch Time', Hotel Grand Chancellor Hobart, 24-26th May, 2007. Deakin, A.C.T.: Blackwell Publishing for the Dietitians Association of Australia. doi: 10.1111/j.1747-0080.2007.00166.x
2007
Conference Publication
Prolonged bouts of sedentary time are associated with percent body-fat, independent of total sedentary time
Healy, Genevieve, N.., Dunstan, David W., Salmon, Jo, Cerin, Ester, Hawley, John A. and Owen, Neville (2007). Prolonged bouts of sedentary time are associated with percent body-fat, independent of total sedentary time. American College of Sports Medicine Annual Conference, New Orleans, USA, 30 May–2 June, 2007. Maryland, U.S.A.: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. doi: 10.1249/01.mss.0000272920.61887.40
2007
Journal Article
Association of Television Viewing with Fasting and 2-h Postchallenge Plasma Glucose Levels in Adults Without Diagnosed Diabetes
Dunstan, David W., Salmon, Jo, Healy, Genevieve N., Shaw, Jonathan E., Jolley, Damien, Zimmet, Paul Z. and Owen, Neville (2007). Association of Television Viewing with Fasting and 2-h Postchallenge Plasma Glucose Levels in Adults Without Diagnosed Diabetes. Diabetes Care, 30 (3), 516-522. doi: 10.2337/dc06-1996
2007
Conference Publication
The AusDiab study - A unique research tool for understanding the impact of sedentary behaviour and physical activity on risk of type 2 diabetes and related metabolic disorders in Australian adults. Sedentary behaviour & Type 2 diabetes: The AusDiab Study.
Dunstan, D. W., Salmon, J., Owen, N., Healy, G. N., Shaw, J. E. and Zimmet, P. Z. (2007). The AusDiab study - A unique research tool for understanding the impact of sedentary behaviour and physical activity on risk of type 2 diabetes and related metabolic disorders in Australian adults. Sedentary behaviour & Type 2 diabetes: The AusDiab Study.. Sixth National Physical Activity Conference, Adelaide, Australia, 13-16 October 2007. Adelaide: Sports Medicine Australia.
2007
Conference Publication
Do sitting and exercise independently predict the incidence of the metabolic syndrome?
Healy, G. N. (2007). Do sitting and exercise independently predict the incidence of the metabolic syndrome?. American College of Sports Medicine Annual Conference, New Orleans, LO, U.S.A., 30 May-2 June 2007. doi: 10.1249/01.mss.0000272653.81423.60
2007
Conference Publication
Objectively measured sedentary time and light-intensity physical activity are independently associated with components of the metabolic syndrome: The AusDiab study
Healy, G. N., Dunstan, D. W., Shaw, J. E., Zimmet, P. Z. and Owen, N. (2007). Objectively measured sedentary time and light-intensity physical activity are independently associated with components of the metabolic syndrome: The AusDiab study. 42nd EASD Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes, Copenhagen, Denmark, 18-21 September 2006. Berlin; Heidelberg, Germany: Springer Verlag. doi: 10.1007/s00125-007-0809-7
2007
Conference Publication
Joint associations with obesity of sedentary behaviours and physical activity in leisure time
Sugiyama, T., Healy, G. N., Dunstan, D. W., Salmon, J. and Owen, N. (2007). Joint associations with obesity of sedentary behaviours and physical activity in leisure time. 6th National Physical Activity Conference, Adelaide, South Australia, 13-16th October, 2007. Amsterdam, The Netherlands: Sports Medicine Australia and Elsevier.
2007
Conference Publication
Physical ativity, sedentary time and metabolic risk
Healy, G. N., Owen, N. and Dunstan, D. W. (2007). Physical ativity, sedentary time and metabolic risk. AusDiab Annual Meeting, Melbourne, Australia, 6-7 December 2007.
2007
Conference Publication
Prolonged bouts of sedentary time are associated with 2-hr plasma glucose, independent of total sedentary time. Sedentary behaviour & Type 2 diabetes: The AusDiab Study
Healy, G. N., Dunstan, D. W., Salmon, J., Cerin, E. and Owen, N. (2007). Prolonged bouts of sedentary time are associated with 2-hr plasma glucose, independent of total sedentary time. Sedentary behaviour & Type 2 diabetes: The AusDiab Study. Sixth National Physical Activity Conference, Adelaide, Australia, 13-16 October 2007.
2007
Conference Publication
Associations of self-reported television viewing time and objective measures of sedentary time with blood glucose indicies. Sedentary behaviour & Type 2 diabetes: The AusDiab Study
Dunstan, D. W., Healy, G. N., Owen, N., Salmon, J., Shaw, J. E. and Zimmet, P. Z.. (2007). Associations of self-reported television viewing time and objective measures of sedentary time with blood glucose indicies. Sedentary behaviour & Type 2 diabetes: The AusDiab Study. Sixth National Physical Activity Conference, Adelaide, Australia, 13-16 October 2007. Amsterdam, Netherlands: Elsevier.
2007
Conference Publication
Insufficient physical activity or prolonged sedentary behaviour: Which is the stronger predictor of Body Mass Index?
Sugiyama, T., Healy, G. N., Dunstan, D. W., Salmon, J. and Owen, N. (2007). Insufficient physical activity or prolonged sedentary behaviour: Which is the stronger predictor of Body Mass Index?. "be active '07" 2007 Australian Conference of Science and Medicine in Sport, Adelaide, South Australia, 13-16 October, 2007. Amsterdam, The Netherlands: Elsevier. doi: 10.1016/S1440-2440(07)70385-7
2007
Conference Publication
Accelerometers: The good, the bad and the frustrating: Measuring physical activity
Healy, G. N. (2007). Accelerometers: The good, the bad and the frustrating: Measuring physical activity. 6th National Physical Activity Conference, Adelaide Convention Centre, 13-16th October, 2007. Amsterdam, The Netherlands: Sports Medicine Australia and Elsevier.
2007
Conference Publication
Cerebral impedance following hypoxia/ischaemia in the human infant
Lingwood, B. E, Healy, G. N., Kecskes, Z., Dunster, K. R., Gray, P. H., Ward, L. C. and Colditz, P. B. (2007). Cerebral impedance following hypoxia/ischaemia in the human infant. 13th International Conference on Electrical Bioimpedance and 8th Conference on Electrical Impedance Tomography, Graz, Austria, 29 August - 2 September, 2007. Berlin, Germany: Springer. doi: 10.1007/978-3-540-73841-1
Funding
Current funding
Supervision
Availability
- Professor Genevieve Healy is:
- Available for supervision
Before you email them, read our advice on how to contact a supervisor.
Available projects
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Supporting workers to sit less and move more for their health and wellbeing
The BeUpstanding™ program (www.beupstanding.com.au) supports desk-based work teams to sit less and move more, for better health and wellbeing. Developed by the researchers at the School of Public Health, the University of Queensland, the program is currently being evaluated through a national implementation trial. Findings from the implementation trial will inform future wide-scale dissemination efforts, as well as national and international policy and practice.
We are now seeking HDR students to join the BeUpstanding team and be part of this world-first workplace health promotion initiative. Specifically, we are looking for students to lead a program of work across five streams (five different HDRs): small business, rural and regional workers, large organisations, universities, and call centres. Within each stream, the broad aims of the HDR research will be:
- To determine the facilitators and barriers to delivery of BeUpstanding using a mixed methods approach
- To develop implementation strategy(s) to assist in delivering BeUpstanding using a stakeholder engagement process
- To evaluate the feasibility and acceptability of the implementation strategy(s) via a pilot study(s).
This unique opportunity would suit students with a background in health promotion, public health, health psychology, implementation science, and/or human movement studies. Excellent communication skills are essential as you will be working with employers and employees. There is currently a funded scholarship available - search BeUpstanding under UQ Earmarked scholarships:
https://graduate-school.uq.edu.au/available-cat-1-phd-projects
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Preventing diabetes through taking small steps for big changes
Small Steps for Big Changes is a diabetes prevention healthy lifestyle program. Developed in Canada, our team has received CIHR-NHMRC grant funding to examine the adaption and implementation of the program into an Australian context with clinical and community partners. We are currently seeking PhD candidates to be involved in this exciting project. Successful candidates will work closely with a range of stakeholders, including consumers, practitioners, industry partners and academics.
This unique opportunity would suit students with a background in allied health, health promotion, public health, health psychology, implementation science, or human movement studies. Excellent communication and interpersonal skills are essential. Experience working with industry stakeholders and knowledge of qualitative and quantitative research methods and behaviour change would be of benefit. First Nations applicants are particularly encouraged to apply.
The Australian NHMRC investigator team includes Professor Genevieve Healy, Dr Ana Goode, Dr Sjaan Gomersall and Professor David Dunstan.
Supervision history
Current supervision
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Doctor Philosophy
Organisational and individual factors influencing participation in workplace-based health promotion initiatives
Principal Advisor
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Doctor Philosophy
Organisational and individual factors influencing participation in workplace-based health promotion initiatives
Principal Advisor
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Doctor Philosophy
Understanding the factors associated with workplace exercise programs for office workers and their evaluation
Principal Advisor
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Master Philosophy
Developing and evaluating a student-led model of the Small Steps for Big Changes diabetes prevention program
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Ana Goode, Associate Professor Sjaan Gomersall
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Doctor Philosophy
Understanding and influencing sedentary time in workers with a disability
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Sean Tweedy, Dr Ana Goode, Dr Jessica Hill
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Doctor Philosophy
Physical activity behaviour change training for pre-professional health students to support delivery in clinical practice
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Roma Forbes, Associate Professor Sjaan Gomersall
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Doctor Philosophy
An embedded process evaluation of the FITTEST trial
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Natasha Reid, Dr Adrienne Young
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Doctor Philosophy
Behaviour Change for Healthy Living - Implementation and evaluation of a health professional delivered physical activity intervention in older adults in a community health service
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Roma Forbes, Associate Professor Sjaan Gomersall
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Doctor Philosophy
Behaviour Change for Healthy Living - Implementation and evaluation of a health professional delivered physical activity intervention in older adults in a community health service
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Roma Forbes, Associate Professor Sjaan Gomersall
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Doctor Philosophy
Using conversation analysis to understand and quantify allied health professionals' dietary behaviour change talk with adults living with Type 2 Diabetes
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Associate Professor Sjaan Gomersall
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Doctor Philosophy
Using conversation analysis to understand and quantify allied health professionals' dietary behaviour change talk with adults living with Type 2 Diabetes
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Associate Professor Sjaan Gomersall
Completed supervision
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2020
Doctor Philosophy
Influencing sedentary time in the workplace: Understanding behaviour change through accumulation patterns, temporal variations and use of strategies
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Bronwyn Clark
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2018
Doctor Philosophy
Encouraging Office Workers to 'Stand Up, Sit Less, and Move More': Evaluation of Organisational-level Support and Activity Tracker Strategies
Principal Advisor
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2018
Doctor Philosophy
Sedentary Behaviour and Physical Function in Older Adults
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Paul Gardiner
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2023
Doctor Philosophy
Understanding and supporting the uptake and use of sit-stand workstations
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Ana Goode
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2012
Doctor Philosophy
Understanding and influencing sedentary behaviour in older adults
Associate Advisor
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2012
Doctor Philosophy
Physical Activity, Sedentary Behaviour and Retinal Microvasculature
Associate Advisor
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2012
Doctor Philosophy
Measurement of Adults' Sedentary Behaviour by Questionnaire
Associate Advisor
Media
Enquiries
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