Abstract
School organizational readiness to implement interventions may play an important role for the actual obtained implementation level, and knowledge about organizational readiness prior to intervention start can help pinpoint how to optimize support to the schools. In this study, we applied a novel heuristic, R = MC2 to assess school organizational readiness prior to implementation of a multicomponent smoking prevention program. Furthermore, we examined the association to actual implementation after the first year of study. We used questionnaire data from school coordinators at 40 schools in Denmark who had accepted to implement the multi-component smoking prevention intervention—X:IT II—in the school year 2017–2018 including three main components: (1) Rules on smoke-free school time, (2) A smoke-free curriculum, and (3) Parental involvement. On behalf of the school, a school coordinator answered a baseline questionnaire about the organizational readiness and a follow-up questionnaire about implementation of the three components after first year of study. Readiness was measured by summing aspects of motivation (relative advantage, compatibility, complexity, and priority), general capacity (culture, climate, and staff capacity), and innovation-specific capacity (knowledge, skills, and abilities). Based on school coordinators’ perceptions, almost all schools had good general capacity while the other two areas of readiness varied across schools; overall, 56.8% of schools (N = 25) had good motivation for implementing the X:IT II intervention and 61.3% (N = 27) had high innovation-specific capacity. Half of the schools had high overall readiness defined as high motivation and high innovation-specific capacity. Schools with high overall readiness implemented the rules on smoke-free school time, smoke-free curriculum, and parental involvement to a higher degree than schools with low overall readiness. All participating schools possessed sufficient levels of general capacity, e.g., a well-functioning organizational culture and sufficient staff capacity. High levels of motivation and innovation-specific capacity were positively associated with the schools’ actual implementation of the main intervention components. This way of conceptualizing and measuring organizational readiness may be useful in future studies, i.e., in studies where enhancing readiness is a main objective.
Highlights
School-based smoking prevention is an important and widely used strategy for reducing the overall smoking prevalence in youth (Thomas et al 2013)
Most school coordinators agreed that X:IT II was compatible with existing school values (77.3%) and that it was a school responsibility to work with smoking prevention (88.6%)
Regarding perceived complexity of the intervention, 61.3% of school coordinators responded that the educational materials seemed easy to work with, whereas half of the school coordinators were concerned about whether they would be able to adhere to the rules for smoke-free school time
Summary
School-based smoking prevention is an important and widely used strategy for reducing the overall smoking prevalence in youth (Thomas et al 2013). Schools’ level of implementation of these multi-component interventions may vary, i.e., some schools may implement all components well, while others may only be successful in implementing one specific component (Bast et al 2016). This suggests that schools have different needs for support depending on the nature of the intervention component. Implementation levels are influenced by characteristics of the intervention (i.e., complexity of the intervention) and the surrounding intervention support system (Domitrovich et al 2008). The intervention and the support system are independent, interrelated, components of a whole (Domitrovich et al 2008)
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