2810379750 bmi@hmu.gr

SUNRISE

CategoryEuropean
Project TitleSUNRISE – SUstaiNable inteRventions and healthy behaviours for adoleScent primary prEvention of cancer with digital tools
Funding OrganizationEC
ProgrammeHorizon Europe
CoordinatorCentre for Research and Technology Hellas (short name: CERTH) – Greece
PartnersHellenic Mediterranean University – Greece
Schweizer Institut fur Sucht und Gesundheitsforschung – Switzerland
Cyprus Association of Cancer Patients and Friends – Cyprus
Ghent University – Belgium
The Oncology Institute „Prof. Dr. Ion Chiricuta” – Romania
Alma Mater Europaea, ECM – Slovenia
Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Laboratory of Medical Physics and Digital Innovation – Greece
BRIDG – Estonia
PredictBy – Spain
PARTICLE – Portugal
Foundation for the Promotion of Health and Biomedical Research of Valencia Region – Spain
Federazione Italiana Delle Associazioni Di Volontariato In Oncologia – Italy
Servicio Vasco de Salud Osakidetza, Paediatric Department, Pediatric Oncology Section – Spain
Biocruces Bizkaia, Clinical Research Unit – Spain
Ellinogermaniki Agogi – Greece
Vlaams Instituut Gezond Leven – Belgium
Youth Cancer Europe – Romania
The University of Sydney, The Matilda Centre – Australia
Duration01/01/2024 – 30/04/2028 (52 months)
Total Budget5.998.408,75 €
HMU budget527.500,00 €
Web Site
Project ObjectivePrimary prevention of cancer through behaviour changes in adolescence – a critical period in which many risk behaviours are initiated –, is a huge health and societal challenge in Europe. In alignment with this need, SUNRISE will co-create, implement and evaluate an innovative digitally-enhanced life-skills programme for primary prevention of cancer through sustainable health behaviour change in adolescents, tailored to their socio-economic, cultural and environmental diversities. SUNRISE will combine an established, evidencebased digital solution for smoking prevention, with novel intervention approaches such as peer social media campaigns, advertising literacy training, educational games, and social robot platforms, to take cancer prevention approaches for adolescents in the EU to the next level. The digitally-enhanced programme and its components will be developed through co-creation with schools-as-living-labs methods involving multiple societal actors such as educators, adolescents, parents, public health experts, and policy-makers. The programme will be implemented and evaluated at large scale across 154 schools and 7500 students in urban and rural regions of 8 European countries – Greece, Switzerland, Slovenia, Spain, Cyprus, Italy, Belgium, Romania -, including socially disadvantaged groups such as migrants and ethnic minorities. The effectiveness of both methods for achieving long-term health behaviour change, as well as the implementation strategy for solution adoption and multi-country sustainability, will be evaluated.