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Health Promotion International Advance Access published online on July 5, 2006

Health Promotion International, doi:10.1093/heapro/dal020
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© The Author (2006). Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Article

System-wide adoption of health promotion practices by schools: evaluation of a telephone and mail-based dissemination strategy in Australia

ELIZABETH JOHNSTONE 1, JENNY KNIGHT 2 *, KAREN GILLHAM 1, ELIZABETH CAMPBELL 2, CRAIG NICHOLAS 1, and JOHN WIGGERS 2

1 Hunter New England Population Health, Hunter New England Area Health Service, New South Wales, Australia
2 Hunter New England Population Health, Hunter New England Area Health Service, New South Wales, Australia; University of Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia

* To whom correspondence should be addressed.
JENNY KNIGHT, E-mail: Jenny.Knight{at}hnehealth.nsw.gov.au


   Abstract

SUMMARY Schools can potentially benefit from system-wide approaches to the dissemination of health promotion practices. This intervention study undertaken in the Hunter Region of NSW, Australia, used a pre-post design to assess whether a phone and mail intervention dissemination strategy was associated with an increase in the proportion of 218 primary schools undertaking eight health promotion practices. Health promotion practices addressed the prevention of harm associated with five agreed health issues--smoking, nutrition, playground safety, asthma and infectious diseases. The study also assessed acceptability of the dissemination strategy to schools, cost and whether intervention schools’ characteristics were associated with uptake of health promotion practices. Compared to baseline a significant improvement in prevalence was observed at both 1 and 2 year follow-up for seven of the eight health promotion practices addressed. The greatest improvement occurred in the first year of the project. There was a greater uptake of the practice of providing information regarding passive smoking in urban schools. The dissemination strategy was found to have a cost per adopted practice of $A121, and to be acceptable to the large majority (>90%) of schools. The results suggest that the dissemination strategy may represent a relatively low cost method of enhancing health promotion practices in schools and of monitoring such practices. Further research addressing the methodological issues of this study is needed to confirm these findings.

Keywords: computer-assisted telephone interview; health promotion; primary schools.
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