| Literature DB >> 27966675 |
Simon J Sebire1, Mark J Edwards1, Rona Campbell2, Russell Jago1, Ruth Kipping2, Kathryn Banfield1, Keeley Tomkinson2, Kirsty Garfield2, Ronan A Lyons3, Joanne Simon2, Peter S Blair2, William Hollingworth2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Physical activity levels are low amongst adolescent girls, and this population faces specific barriers to being active. Peer influences on health behaviours are important in adolescence and peer-led interventions might hold promise to change behaviour. This paper describes the protocol for a feasibility cluster randomised controlled trial of Peer-Led physical Activity iNtervention for Adolescent girls (PLAN-A), a peer-led intervention aimed at increasing adolescent girls' physical activity levels. METHODS/Entities:
Keywords: Adolescent girls; Intervention; Peers; Physical activity; School
Year: 2016 PMID: 27966675 PMCID: PMC4770840 DOI: 10.1186/s40814-015-0045-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pilot Feasibility Stud ISSN: 2055-5784
Fig. 1Flow diagram of the PLAN-A feasibility trial
PLAN-A peer-supporter training intervention components, behaviour change techniques and behavioural mediators targeted
| Training session/activity/tasks | Behaviour change technique [ | Behavioural mediators |
|---|---|---|
| Physical activity content | ||
| Physical activity knowledge: examining pre-existing knowledge, exploring PA myths, interactive tasks to find out what counts as PA, PA recommendations and levels of PA in adolescent girls. | • Provide information on consequences of behaviour in general | Knowledge, competence |
| Fitting physical activity in: peer-supporters analyse ‘a day in their life’, identify existing PA and sedentary time and places and means by which to add in PA. Working with others to support them to identify how to fit PA into daily life and practical activities to reduce sedentary time in a range of situations. | • Barrier identification/problem solving | Autonomy, competence, relatedness |
| Busting barriers: identification and discussion of barriers adolescent girls face to being active. Problem solving tasks to ‘bust’ the barriers. | • Barrier identification/problem solving | Autonomy, competence, relatedness |
| Confidence and competence: watching a short video about girls’ physical activity stereotypes, discussing beliefs in groups and empowering through focussing on self-esteem and past success | • Barrier identification/problem solving | Autonomy, competence, relatedness, self-esteem |
| Goal setting: learning how to set ‘SMART goals’ and planning two peer-supporter/activity goals. | • Goal setting (outcome) | Autonomy, competence |
| Peer-supporter content | ||
| Identifying personal peer-supporter attributes: self-reflection on personal skills and interests which may make them a good peer-supporter. | • Prompt identification as role model/position advocate | Competence, self-esteem |
| Identifying peer-supporter skills: group work to develop a list and then pyramid of the most important peer-supporter skills. | • Plan social support/social change | Competence, autonomy |
| When, where, who? Activity to identify the timing, situations and social circumstances in which to give peer-support. | • Action planning | Competence, relatedness |
| Listening skills: interactive games to highlight key skills related to listening to peers about being active. | • Plan social support/social change | Competence, relatedness |
| Communication skills: written and practical role play activities building awareness of communication skills and practicing their use. | • Provide rewards contingent on successful behaviour | Competence, relatedness |
| Peer-supporter role play: reinforcement of key physical activity information/learning and combination with simple role plays using sentence starters (e.g. ‘I was at this training the other day…’ | • Plan social support/social change | Autonomy, competence, relatedness |
Summary of the PLAN-A feasibility trial process evaluation
| Participant | Method | Information gathered |
|---|---|---|
| Peer-supporters | Post-training questionnaire (All peer-supporters in 4 schools) | Open ended questions regarding enjoyment, identifying memorable facts, ratings of confidence to peer support and anticipated difficulties. Quantitative ratings of enjoyment of training, duration, confidence, venue and trainers (including trainer autonomy support [ |
| Post-intervention focus groups (1 per school, | Perceptions of training and intervention: peer-supporter recruitment, training content, logistics and trainer, being a peer-supporter (e.g. successes and challenges, use of the email/web support, interpersonal and environmental barriers/facilitators) | |
| Non-peer-supporter pupils | T0, T1 and T2 questionnaire | Two items assessing perceived contact/conversations with year 8 pupils about physical activity |
| Post-intervention focus groups (1 per school, | Perceptions of receiving peer-support, awareness of peer-supporters, peer nomination, perceptions of impact, research methods. | |
| Peer-supporter trainers | Post-training questionnaire ( | Attendance, absences and reasons for absence, |
| Post-delivery semi-structured interviews ( | Perceptions of train-the-trainers programme and 2-day peer-supporter training, resources, venue, successes, challenges and refinements | |
| Training observation | Degree to which lesson plans were delivered as manualised. Qualitative observations of successes and challenges. | |
| Parents of peer-supporters | Semi-structured interviews ( | Awareness of the intervention, views on acceptability of training, intervention, influence of family context and study child’s activity and attitudes. Perception of impact. |
| School contact | Semi-structured interviews ( | Peer nomination, training, intervention, difficulties and successes. Acceptability of research methods. |
School context
School level data: school and year 8 size, pupil premium allocation
School contact questionnaires: assessment of school PA provisions, school policies, PA in the curriculum and school attitude towards PA