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Randomized Controlled Trial
. 2015 Feb;49(4):210-8.
doi: 10.1136/bjsports-2013-093361. Epub 2014 Oct 13.

Action Schools! BC implementation: from efficacy to effectiveness to scale-up

Affiliations
Randomized Controlled Trial

Action Schools! BC implementation: from efficacy to effectiveness to scale-up

Heather A McKay et al. Br J Sports Med. 2015 Feb.

Abstract

Objectives: To describe Action Schools! BC (AS! BC) from efficacy to scale-up.

Participants/setting: Education and health system stakeholders and children in grades 4-6 from elementary schools in British Columbia, Canada.

Intervention: At the provincial level, the AS! BC model reflected socioecological theory and a partnership approach to social change. Knowledge translation and exchange were embedded as a foundational element. At the school level, AS! BC is a comprehensive school health-based model providing teachers and schools with training and resources to integrate physical activity (PA) and healthy eating (HE) into the school environment. Our research team partnered with key community and government stakeholders to deliver and evaluate AS! BC over efficacy, effectiveness and implementation trials.

Results: On the basis of significant increases in PA, cardiovascular fitness, bone and HE in AS! BC schools during efficacy trials, the BC government supported a provincial scale-up. Since its inception, the AS! BC Support Team and >225 trained regional trainers have delivered 4677 teacher-focused workshops (training approximately 81,000 teachers), reaching approximately 500,000 students. After scale-up, PA delivery was replicated but the magnitude of change appeared less. One (HE) and 4 (PA) years after scale-up, trained AS! BC teachers provided more PA and HE opportunities for students even in the context of supportive provincial policies.

Conclusions: Whole school models like AS! BC can enhance children's PA and health when implemented in partnership with key stakeholders. At the school level, adequately trained and resourced teachers and supportive school policies promoted successful scale-up and sustained implementation. At the provincial level, multisectoral partnerships and embedded knowledge exchange mechanisms influenced the context for action at the provincial and school level, and were core elements of successful implementation.

Trial registration number: Clinical Trials Registry NCT01412203.

Keywords: Children; Health promotion; Implementation; Intervention; School.

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