4.3 Article

Using School Staff Members to Implement a Childhood Obesity Prevention Intervention in Low-Income School Districts: the Massachusetts Childhood Obesity Research Demonstration (MA-CORD Project), 2012-2014

Journal

PREVENTING CHRONIC DISEASE
Volume 14, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

CENTERS DISEASE CONTROL
DOI: 10.5888/pcd14.160381

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion [U18DP003370]
  2. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [T32CA0900]
  3. NIH [T32DK007703, T32HL098048]
  4. American Heart Association [14POST20140055]

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Introduction Although evidence-based interventions to prevent childhood obesity in school settings exist, few studies have identified factors that enhance school districts' capacity to undertake such efforts. We describe the implementation of a school-based intervention using classroom lessons based on existing Eat Well and Keep Moving and Planet Health behavior change interventions and schoolwide activities to target 5,144 children in 4th through 7th grade in 2 low-income school districts Methods The intervention was part of the Massachusetts Childhood Obesity Research Demonstration (MA-CORD) project, a multisector community-based intervention implemented from 2012 through 2014. Using mixed methods, we operationalized key implementation outcomes, including acceptability, adoption, appropriateness, feasibility, implementation fidelity, perceived implementation cost, reach, and sustainability. Results MA-CORD was adopted in 2 school districts that were facing resource limitations and competing priorities. Although strong leadership support existed in both communities at baseline, one district's staff reported less schoolwide readiness and commitment. Consequently, fewer teachers reported engaging in training, teaching lessons, or planning to sustain the lessons after MA-CORD. Interviews showed that principal and superintendent turnover, statewide testing, and teacher burnout limited implementation; passionate wellness champions in schools appeared to offset implementation barriers. Conclusion Future interventions should assess adoption readiness at both leadership and staff levels, offer curriculum training sessions during school hours, use school nurses or health teachers as wellness champions to support teachers, and offer incentives such as staff stipends or play equipment to encourage school participation and sustained intervention activities.

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