| Literature DB >> 25886027 |
Joanne Trigwell1, Ciara E McGee2, Rebecca C Murphy3, Lorna A Porcellato4, Michael Ussher5, Katy Garnham-Lee6, Zoe R Knowles7, Lawrence Foweather8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: SmokeFree Sports (SFS) was a multi-component sport-for-health intervention aiming at preventing smoking among nine to ten year old primary school children from North West England. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the process and implementation of SFS, examining intervention reach, dose, fidelity, acceptability and sustainability, in order to understand the feasibility and challenges of delivering such interventions and inform interpretations of intervention effectiveness.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25886027 PMCID: PMC4428003 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-015-1645-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Figure 1Schematic overview of SmokeFree Sports intervention.
Data sources used to assess implementation of SFS
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| SFS booking logs | 32 schools | Oct 2012-Jun 2013 | X | X | |||
| Focus groups | 95 children (18 focus groups) | Apr 2013-Jun 2013 | X | X | |||
| Interviews | 7 coaches; 20 teachers | Jan-Jun 2013 | X | X | X | ||
| Self-evaluation of intervention delivery | 125 sessions completed by 24 teachers | Oct 2012-Jun 2013 | X | X | X | ||
| Direct observations of intervention delivery | 50 sessions across 13 intervention schools (10 for each activity type) | Oct 2012-Apr 2013 | X | X | |||
| SFS evaluation questionnaire | 1097 children; 50 teachers | Apr 2013-Jun 2013 | X (teachers only) | X | |||
Direct observations coding framework
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Barriers coaches faced in delivering SFS sessions
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Barriers teachers faced in delivering SFS sessions
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| Time |
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| Environment |
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| Educational understanding |
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| Behaviour |
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| Children’s preferences |
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Positive aspects of coaching sessions
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| Fun activities/enjoyment |
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| Educational/engaging |
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| Experience different activities |
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Negative aspects of coaching sessions
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| Session type/activities |
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| Unfairness of games |
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| Repetitive nature of sessions |
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| Messages delivered were perceived to be incorrect |
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| Lack of clarity of message/purpose of game |
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| Sedentary nature of games |
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Advantages of using teachers to deliver SFS
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| Respected |
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| Knowledge of smoking issues |
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| Experience of working with children |
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| Relationship with teacher | “ |
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| Relationship with child |
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| Relationship with child |
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| Time to follow-up messages |
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Advantages of using coaches to deliver SFS
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| Role model |
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| Fun |
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| Experience and knowledge |
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| Knowledge of SFS/experience of delivery |
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| Fresh approach |
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| Authority and credibility |
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| Coaching experience |
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| Experience delivering SFS |
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| Role model status |
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| Belief and enthusiasm |
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| Novelty factor |
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| Power of football badge |
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