Abstract
The voice of youth is crucial to advancing solutions that contribute to effective strategies to improve youth health outcomes. The problem, however, is that youth/student voices are often overlooked, and stakeholders typically engage in decision-making without involving youth. The burden of chronic disease is increasing worldwide, and in Canada chronic disease accounts for 89 per cent of deaths. However, currently, youth spend less time being physically active while engaging in more unhealthy eating behaviours than ever before. High rates of unhealthy behaviours such as physical inactivity, unhealthy eating and tobacco use are putting Canadian youth at risk of health problems such as increased levels of overweight and obesity, cardiovascular disease and type 2 diabetes. Focus group methodology was utilised to conduct 7 focus groups with 50 students in grades 7–12 from schools in Prince Edward Island, Canada. The key themes that emerged included: (1) youth health issues such as lack of opportunities to be physically active, cost and quality of healthy food options, and bullying; (2) facilitators and barriers to health promotion, including positive peer and adult role models, positive relationships with adults and competitiveness of school sports; and (3) lack of student voice. Our findings suggest that actively engaging youth provides opportunities to understand youth perspectives on how to encourage them to make healthy choices and engage in healthy behaviours. Attention needs to be paid to inclusive knowledge exchange practices that value and integrate youth perspectives and ideas as a basis for building health promotion actions and interventions.Keywords: knowledge exchange, youth health, youth engagement
Highlights
It is important to consider the school context when examining the health behaviours of youth, as they spend a large portion of their time in that environment
The inability of youth health policy, practice and research stakeholders to engage youth/ students in health promotion has been documented in youth health knowledge exchange literature (Morrow 2001; Wong, Zimmerman & Parker 2010), as well as by provincial stakeholders in Prince Edward Island (PEI)
Results were organised into the four common themes identified by students regarding youth health issues and improving youth health, as discussed below
Summary
It is important to consider the school context when examining the health behaviours of youth, as they spend a large portion of their time in that environment. Considering the amount of time youth spend in school settings, the school context is an ideal environment to initiate and facilitate healthy behaviours. The inability of youth health policy, practice and research stakeholders to engage youth/ students in health promotion has been documented in youth health knowledge exchange literature (Morrow 2001; Wong, Zimmerman & Parker 2010), as well as by provincial stakeholders in PEI. To address this gap, a key objective of our youth health research and of the provincial stakeholders in PEI was to capture perspectives from youth themselves. Knowledge exchange through two-way communication between researchers, decision-makers and practitioners has been found to be more conducive to evidence-informed action (Clark et al 2010; Lavis et al 2003; Wilson et al 2012)
Published Version (
Free)
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have