Abstract

Capacity building approaches are useful in large-scale community-based health promotion interventions. However, models to guide and evaluate capacity building among social service agency staff in community settings are rare in the literature. This paper describes the development and evaluation of a 1-day (7 h) train-the-trainer (TTT) workshop for the "Enhancing Family Well-Being Project". The workshop aimed at equipping staff from different community agencies with the knowledge and skills to design, implement, and evaluate positive psychology-based interventions for their clients in Sham Shui Po, an over-crowded and low-income district in Hong Kong. The current TTT extended and improved on our previous successful model by adding research and evaluation methods (including the Logic Model, process evaluation, and randomized controlled trial), which are important to plan and evaluate the community interventions. Evaluation of the TTT was guided by the Integrated Model of Training Evaluation and Effectiveness (IMTEE), with quantitative and qualitative methods. Quantitative data were collected from pretraining (T1), post-training (T2), and 6-month (T3) and 12-month (T4) follow-up surveys. Qualitative data were collected from four focus groups of agency staff after the intervention. Ninety-three staff from 30 community agencies attended the training, and 90 completed the baseline survey. Eighty-eight, 63, and 57 staff performed the evaluations at T2, T3, and T4, respectively. Agency staff were satisfied with the TTT. Immediate enhancement of knowledge, self-efficacy, and positive attitudes toward the training content was found at T2 (Cohen's d ranged from 0.24 to 1.22, all p < 0.05). Enhancement of knowledge of all training contents persisted at T3 and T4 (Cohen's d ranged from 0.34 to 0.63, all p < 0.05). Enhancement of self-efficacy in the use of positive psychology in intervention design persisted at T3 (Cohen's d = 0.22, p = 0.04). The skills learned were utilized to plan and develop subsequent interventions. Twenty-nine interventions were successfully designed and implemented by the agency staff, and delivered to 1,586 participants. The agency staff indicated their intention to utilize the skills they had learned for other interventions (score ≥4 out of 6) and to share these skills with their colleagues. Qualitative feedbacks from 23 agency staff supported the quantitative results. Our brief TTT was effectively delivered to a large number of agency staff and showed effects that persisted up to 12 months. Our training and evaluation models may offer a template for capacity building among social service agency staff for community brief, universal family health promotion interventions in diverse settings.

Highlights

  • This paper describes a short train-the-trainer (TTT) workshop and its evaluation, in a community-based intervention project designed to improve family well-being in Hong Kong, under the “FAMILY: a Jockey Club Initiative for a Harmonious Society” (“The FAMILY Project”, http://www.family.org.hk) [1]

  • The participants had experience in social service for 10.5 years and been employed in their current organization for 8 years. Their training in positive psychology and research methods prior to the current TTT was perceived as insufficient (4.63 and 3.79 out of 10, respectively). They were involved in the community-based intervention programs of the Enhancing Family Well-Being (EFWB) Project as program content designers (69%), interventionists (63%), and intervention supporting staff (53%)

  • The effect sizes for enhancing competence and performance in positive psychology are smaller in the current TTT, in comparison to that of the Happy Family Kitchen (HFK)

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Summary

Introduction

This paper describes a short train-the-trainer (TTT) workshop and its evaluation, in a community-based intervention project designed to improve family well-being in Hong Kong, under the “FAMILY: a Jockey Club Initiative for a Harmonious Society” (“The FAMILY Project”, http://www.family.org.hk) [1]. The TTT was a 1-day (7 h) workshop to build community social service agency staff ’s capacity for the intervention and the science of evaluation. Agency staff were expected to immediately use the knowledge and skills acquired to design, implement, and evaluate positive psychology-based interventions for participants recruited from their communities. In the TTT framework, experts train the interventionists to deliver services [4]. This strategy enables low cost, preventive, and population-wide health promotion interventions [5]. The academic and community collaborative approach [6] that drives the TTT has been shown to work well outside the West [7], but there are few studies that include rigorous evaluation of TTTs

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