Abstract

Queensland’s B.strong brief intervention training program was a complex intervention developed for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health workers to assist clients address multiple health risks of smoking, poor nutrition and physical inactivity. This study evaluates program effectiveness by applying the Kirkpatrick four-level evaluation model: (1) Reaction, participants’ satisfaction; (2) Learning, changes in participants’ knowledge, confidence, attitudes, skills and usual practice; (3) Behaviour, application of learning to practice; and (4) Results, outcomes resulting from training. A retrospective analysis was conducted on data for respondents completing pre-training, post-workshop and follow-up surveys. Changes in domains such as training participant knowledge, confidence, attitudes, and practices between survey times were assessed using paired-samples t-tests. From 2017–2019, B.strong trained 1150 health professionals, reaching targets for workshop and online training. Findings showed statistically significant improvements from baseline to follow-up in: participants’ knowledge, confidence, and some attitudes to conducting brief interventions in each domain of smoking cessation, nutrition and physical activity; and in the frequency of participants providing client brief interventions in each of the three domains. There was a statistically significant improvement in frequency of participants providing brief interventions for multiple health behaviours at the same time from pre-workshop to follow-up. Indigenous Queenslander telephone counselling referrals for smoking cessation increased during the program period. B.strong improved practitioners’ capacity to deliver brief interventions addressing multiple health risks with Indigenous clients.

Highlights

  • IntroductionQueensland Health initially funded Menzies School of Health Research (Menzies) to develop, implement and evaluate the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Brief Intervention Training Program (B.strong) from October 2016 to August 2019 (A$2.3M), and subsequently extended the program to June 2020 (A$0.5M)

  • The decline in smoking prevalence for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians shows the potential for improvement across multiple risk factors

  • This paper reports on the evaluation of the effectiveness of the B.strong brief intervention training program, using the New World Kirkpatrick Model as a framework [52]

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Summary

Introduction

Queensland Health initially funded Menzies School of Health Research (Menzies) to develop, implement and evaluate the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Brief Intervention Training Program (B.strong) from October 2016 to August 2019 (A$2.3M), and subsequently extended the program to June 2020 (A$0.5M). In providing guidance for evaluation, the Council describes complex interventions as interventions that contain several interacting components. Such complexity includes: the number and difficulty of behaviours required by those delivering or receiving the program, and the number and variability of outcomes. B.strong was a multi-strategy intervention to provide Queensland’s Indigenous health and community workforce with the knowledge, skills and tools to deliver brief interventions in smoking cessation, nutrition and physical activity to promote healthy changes to their clients.

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