| Literature DB >> 32183902 |
Matthew Mclaughlin1,2,3,4, Jed Duff5, Rachel Sutherland6,5,7,8, Elizabeth Campbell6,5,7,8, Luke Wolfenden6,5,7,8, John Wiggers6,5,7,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Physical Activity 4 Everyone (PA4E1) is a physical activity program for secondary schools located in low-socioeconomic areas. Over a 24-month period, schools in the program arm of a cluster randomised controlled trial (n = up to 38 schools) will receive a multi-component implementation support strategy to embed the seven school physical activity practices of the PA4E1 program. This article describes the process evaluation of the PA4E1 hybrid implementation-effectiveness trial. The process evaluation aims to describe the fidelity and reach of the implementation support strategies using quantitative data; and to describe the acceptability, appropriateness and feasibility of the implementation support strategies and physical activity practices to school stakeholders using mixed methods.Entities:
Keywords: Adolescents; Implementation; Mixed methods; Physical activity; Process evaluation; Randomised controlled trial; Schools
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32183902 PMCID: PMC7077014 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-020-4187-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Fig. 1PA4E1 program logic model: Inclusive of implementation support strategies, physical activity practices and evaluation outcomes of the hybrid implementation-effectiveness evaluation. For detailed descriptions of the implementation support strategies and the physical activity practices see Additional file 2
Fig. 2Schedule of PA4E1 process evaluation data collection methods (SPIRIT Figure)
Methods for data collection with participants
| Surveys | Semi-structured interviews | Focus groups | Website analytics | Administrative data | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Head PE teacher | |||||
| PE teachers | |||||
| In-School Champions | |||||
| Students |
Definitions of key terms, from Proctor et al. [31]
| Key term | Definition |
|---|---|
| Fidelity | “… the degree to which an intervention was implemented as it was prescribed in the original protocol or as it was intended by the program developers” (p 69) |
| Reach | “…the integration of a practice within a service setting and its subsystems” (p 70) |
| Acceptability | “…the perception among implementation stakeholders that a given treatment, service, practice, or innovation is agreeable, palatable, or satisfactory.” (p 67) |
| Appropriateness | “…the perceived fit, relevance, or compatibility of the innovation or evidence-based practice for a given practice setting, provider, or consumer; and/or perceived fit of the innovation to address a particular issue or problem.” (p 69) |
| Feasibility | “…the extent to which a new treatment, or an innovation, can be successfully used or carried out within a given agency or setting” (p 69) |
Fig. 3Analytical procedure for the PA4E1 mixed methods process evaluation
Example matrix: acceptability, appropriateness and feasibility of the PA4E1 implementation support strategies from the perspective of in-School Champions
| Implementation support strategy: | Quantitative data | Quotes | Qualiative code | Convergence label (agree, slightly agree, silence, dissonance) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Strategy 1: | ||||
| Acceptability | ||||
| Appropriateness | ||||
| Feasibility | ||||