Abstract

BackgroundTeachers’ implementation of evidence-based prevention programs in schools is inconsistent. Using data gathered from the national implementation among grade six students in The Bahamas of an evidence-based HIV intervention [Focus on Youth in the Caribbean (FOYC)], this study examines differences in the degree of implementation (“dose”) and adherence to the core activities (“fidelity of implementation”) by teachers according to theoretically and historically relevant teachers’ characteristics, attitudes, and experiences pre-intervention and post-intervention. The relationship of implementation dose and implementation fidelity is assessed according to student outcomes.MethodsBeginning in 2008, the Bahamian Ministry of Education (MOE) included FOYC in the grade six curriculum nationwide. Consistent with standard practice, teachers were offered MOE training workshops in FOYC prior to delivery. The MOE conducted an anonymous curricular assessment among the grade six students at the beginning and end of the school year. Teachers agreeing to participate in the research component were asked to complete a pre-implementation and post-implementation assessment of attitudes and prior experiences.ResultsTeachers taught 15.6 out of 30 core activities, 24 out of the 46 total activities, and 4.6 out of 8 sessions on average. Three teachers’ implementation groups were identified: 1) High Implementation Group (31.7% of the teachers), characterized by high levels of implementation dose and fidelity of implementation; 2) Moderate Implementation Group (52.8%), showing moderate levels of implementation dose but high levels of fidelity of implementation; and 3) Low Implementation Group (15.6%), with low levels of implementation dose and fidelity of implementation. Low Implementation Group teachers compared to teachers in the two higher performing groups had less training in interactive teaching, limited prior exposure to the FOYC curriculum, incomplete attendance at FOYC training workshops, and low levels of comfort in teaching FOYC lessons. Students taught by teachers in the Low Implementation Group demonstrated poorer outcomes relevant to the four student outcomes (HIV/AIDS knowledge, preventive reproductive health skills, self-efficacy, and intention to use protection if they were to have sex).ConclusionsBoth implementation dose and implementation fidelity are related to student outcomes. Teachers at risk for limited implementation can be identified pre-intervention, thus opening the possibility for focused pre-intervention training.

Highlights

  • Evidence-based prevention and health promotion interventions offer great promise for improving the wellbeing of a population

  • The past decades have witnessed the development of robust HIV prevention intervention portfolios as illustrated by the Center for Disease Control’s identification of 44 “best evidence” HIV prevention programs through its “Prevention Synthesis Project” [2]

  • Study site From 2011 through 2013, all 80 government elementary schools in the Commonwealth of The Bahamas participated in national implementation of Focus on Youth in the Caribbean (FOYC), including the research component described

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Evidence-based prevention and health promotion interventions offer great promise for improving the wellbeing of a population. Much progress has been made in developing and evaluating health-promoting interventions addressing a range of disorders yielding a substantial portfolio of effective public-health programs. Despite significant declines in AIDS-related deaths and lower rates of new HIV infection, the potential impact of evidence-based behavioral prevention programs has been muted because of the difficulties in sustaining effective delivery of these interventions in real-life settings as opposed to effectiveness trials. Initiating implementation of effective programs within a school system is a critically important and complex first step and sustaining these efforts even more so, and sustaining them with fidelity has proven to be a daunting task [3,4,5,6]. Teachers’ implementation of evidence-based prevention programs in schools is inconsistent. The relationship of implementation dose and implementation fidelity is assessed according to student outcomes

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
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

Schedule a call