School factors as barriers to and facilitators of a preventive intervention for pediatric type 2 diabetes

Publication Description
ABSTRACT School-based interventions are essential to prevent pediatric obesity and type 2 diabetes. School environmental factors influence implementation of these interventions. This article examines how school factors acted as barriers to and facilitators of the HEALTHY intervention. The HEALTHY study was a cluster-randomized trial of a multicomponent intervention implemented in 21 schools. Interview data were analyzed to identify barriers and facilitators. Barriers included teacher frustration that intervention activities detracted from tested subjects, student resistance and misbehavior, classroom management problems, communication equipment problems, lack of teacher/staff engagement, high cost and limited availability of nutritious products, inadequate facility space, and large class sizes. Facilitators included teacher/staff engagement, effective classroom management, student engagement, schools with direct control over food service, support from school leaders, and adequate facilities and equipment. Contextual barriers and facilitators must be taken into account in the design and implementation of school-based health interventions.

Primary Author
Hall,William J.
Schneider,Margaret
Thompson,Deborah
Volpe,Stella L.
Steckler,Allan
Hall,John M.
Fisher,M. Randall

Volume
4

Issue
2

Start Page
131

Other Pages
140

Publisher
Springer US

URL
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s13142-013-0226-z

PMID
24904696



Reference Type
Journal Article

Periodical Full
Translational behavioral medicine

Publication Year
2013

Publication Date
Jul 24,

Place of Publication
Boston

ISSN/ISBN
1869-6716

Document Object Index
10.1007/s13142-013-0226-z