School health implementation tools: a mixed methods evaluation of factors influencing their use

Abstract Background The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) develops tools to support implementation of evidence-based interventions for school health. To advance understanding of factors influencing the use of these implementation tools, we conducted an evaluation of state, school...

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Main Authors: Jennifer Leeman, Jean L. Wiecha, Maihan Vu, Jonathan L. Blitstein, Sallie Allgood, Sarah Lee, Caitlin Merlo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-03-01
Series:Implementation Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13012-018-0738-5
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spelling doaj-b09efd7abc6f40a3abe335474001078d2020-11-25T00:44:50ZengBMCImplementation Science1748-59082018-03-0113111310.1186/s13012-018-0738-5School health implementation tools: a mixed methods evaluation of factors influencing their useJennifer Leeman0Jean L. Wiecha1Maihan Vu2Jonathan L. Blitstein3Sallie Allgood4Sarah Lee5Caitlin Merlo6School of Nursing, University of North Carolina at Chapel HillRTI InternationalCenter for Health Promotion & Disease Prevention, University of North Carolina at Chapel HillRTI InternationalSchool of Nursing, University of North Carolina at Chapel HillDivision of Population Health, School Health Branch, Centers for Disease Control and PreventionDivision of Population Health, School Health Branch, Centers for Disease Control and PreventionAbstract Background The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) develops tools to support implementation of evidence-based interventions for school health. To advance understanding of factors influencing the use of these implementation tools, we conducted an evaluation of state, school district, and local school staffs’ use of four CDC tools to support implementation of physical activity, nutrition, health education, and parent engagement. Two frameworks guided the evaluation: Interactive Systems Framework (ISF) for Dissemination and Implementation and Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR). Methods The evaluation applied a mixed methods, cross-sectional design that included online surveys (n = 69 state staff from 43 states), phone interviews (n = 13 state staff from 6 states), and in-person interviews (n = 90 district and school staff from 8 districts in 5 states). Descriptive analyses were applied to surveys and content analysis to interviews. Results The survey found that the majority of state staff surveyed was aware of three of the CDC tools but most were knowledgeable and confident in their ability to use only two. These same two tools were the ones for which states were most likely to have provided training and technical assistance in the past year. Interviews provided insight into how tools were used and why use varied, with themes organized within the ISF domain “support strategies” (e.g., training, technical assistance) and four CFIR domains: (1) characteristics of tools, (2) inner setting, (3) outer setting, and (4) individuals. Overall, tools were valued for the credibility of their source (CDC) and evidence strength and quality. Respondents reported that tools were too complex for use by school staff. However, if tools were adaptable and compatible with inner and outer setting factors, state and district staff were willing and able to adapt tools for school use. Conclusions Implementation tools are essential to supporting broad-scale implementation of evidence-based interventions. This study illustrates how CFIR and ISF might be applied to evaluate factors influencing tools’ use and provides recommendations for designing tools to fit within the multi-tiered systems involved in promoting, supporting, and implementing evidence-based interventions in schools. Findings have relevance for the design of implementation tools for use by other multi-tiered systems.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13012-018-0738-5Implementation toolsSchool healthConsolidated framework for implementation researchInteractive systems framework
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jennifer Leeman
Jean L. Wiecha
Maihan Vu
Jonathan L. Blitstein
Sallie Allgood
Sarah Lee
Caitlin Merlo
spellingShingle Jennifer Leeman
Jean L. Wiecha
Maihan Vu
Jonathan L. Blitstein
Sallie Allgood
Sarah Lee
Caitlin Merlo
School health implementation tools: a mixed methods evaluation of factors influencing their use
Implementation Science
Implementation tools
School health
Consolidated framework for implementation research
Interactive systems framework
author_facet Jennifer Leeman
Jean L. Wiecha
Maihan Vu
Jonathan L. Blitstein
Sallie Allgood
Sarah Lee
Caitlin Merlo
author_sort Jennifer Leeman
title School health implementation tools: a mixed methods evaluation of factors influencing their use
title_short School health implementation tools: a mixed methods evaluation of factors influencing their use
title_full School health implementation tools: a mixed methods evaluation of factors influencing their use
title_fullStr School health implementation tools: a mixed methods evaluation of factors influencing their use
title_full_unstemmed School health implementation tools: a mixed methods evaluation of factors influencing their use
title_sort school health implementation tools: a mixed methods evaluation of factors influencing their use
publisher BMC
series Implementation Science
issn 1748-5908
publishDate 2018-03-01
description Abstract Background The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) develops tools to support implementation of evidence-based interventions for school health. To advance understanding of factors influencing the use of these implementation tools, we conducted an evaluation of state, school district, and local school staffs’ use of four CDC tools to support implementation of physical activity, nutrition, health education, and parent engagement. Two frameworks guided the evaluation: Interactive Systems Framework (ISF) for Dissemination and Implementation and Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR). Methods The evaluation applied a mixed methods, cross-sectional design that included online surveys (n = 69 state staff from 43 states), phone interviews (n = 13 state staff from 6 states), and in-person interviews (n = 90 district and school staff from 8 districts in 5 states). Descriptive analyses were applied to surveys and content analysis to interviews. Results The survey found that the majority of state staff surveyed was aware of three of the CDC tools but most were knowledgeable and confident in their ability to use only two. These same two tools were the ones for which states were most likely to have provided training and technical assistance in the past year. Interviews provided insight into how tools were used and why use varied, with themes organized within the ISF domain “support strategies” (e.g., training, technical assistance) and four CFIR domains: (1) characteristics of tools, (2) inner setting, (3) outer setting, and (4) individuals. Overall, tools were valued for the credibility of their source (CDC) and evidence strength and quality. Respondents reported that tools were too complex for use by school staff. However, if tools were adaptable and compatible with inner and outer setting factors, state and district staff were willing and able to adapt tools for school use. Conclusions Implementation tools are essential to supporting broad-scale implementation of evidence-based interventions. This study illustrates how CFIR and ISF might be applied to evaluate factors influencing tools’ use and provides recommendations for designing tools to fit within the multi-tiered systems involved in promoting, supporting, and implementing evidence-based interventions in schools. Findings have relevance for the design of implementation tools for use by other multi-tiered systems.
topic Implementation tools
School health
Consolidated framework for implementation research
Interactive systems framework
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13012-018-0738-5
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