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Baseline data from a pilot study with primary schools in Limpopo and Gauteng

The receptiveness of school environments to a community-based physical activity intervention programme. Baseline data from a pilot study with primary schools in Limpopo and Gauteng. Presenters: Dr. Cathi Draper & Ms. Anna Grimsrud. Research Team. University of Cape Town –

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Baseline data from a pilot study with primary schools in Limpopo and Gauteng

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  1. The receptiveness of school environments to a community-based physical activity intervention programme Baseline data from a pilot study with primary schools in Limpopo and Gauteng Presenters: Dr. Cathi Draper & Ms. Anna Grimsrud

  2. Research Team University of Cape Town – Exercise Science and Sports Medicine Prof. Vicki Lambert Dr. Cathi Draper Ms. Anna Grimsrud University of the Witwatersrand Prof. Michael Rudolph Dr. Simon Nemutandani Ms. Lauren de Kock

  3. Introduction • Community Health Intervention Programmes (CHIP’s) Western Cape • ‘Discovery Healthy Lifestyles Programmes’ • Factors promoting and/or hindering the receptiveness of schools’ physical and social environments

  4. Intervention and control sites

  5. Schools

  6. Methods • Situational analysis of the school physical activity environment • Questionnaire on Community Environment (IPEN) • Focus groups & semi-structured interviews

  7. Quantitative findings – Situational Analyses

  8. Qualitative findings – IPEN • Community differences • Existing links with community projects • Living conditions – rural vs peri-urban • Access to basic amenities, e.g. electricity, running water & sanitation • Availability of resources, e.g. equipment

  9. Community differences

  10. Qualitative findings – IPEN • Community differences • Existing links with community projects • Living conditions – rural vs peri-urban • Access to basic amenities, e.g. electricity, running water & sanitation • Availability of resources, e.g. equipment

  11. Rural

  12. Peri-Urban

  13. Qualitative findings – IPEN • Community differences • Existing links with community projects • Living conditions – rural vs peri-urban • Access to basic amenities, e.g. electricity, running water & sanitation • Availability of resources, e.g. equipment

  14. Basic amenities

  15. Space: developed vs undeveloped

  16. Qualitative findings – Focus Groups & interviews • Importance of ongoing & sustainable training and management • Transfer and internalisation of knowledge • Impact of knowledge on attitudes, beliefs & behaviour • Increased self-efficacy of leaders • Leaders as role models for members • Role of training staff

  17. Factors promoting and hindering receptiveness Common to other SA school environments Unique to DHLP’s

  18. Unique factors • Intersectoral collaboration • Surveillance & evaluation • Community participation • Quality of teacher training • Buy-in of teachers • Support for teachers as leaders • Not a high demand for equipment, but space is required

  19. Collaborators

  20. Fieldworkers Educators

  21. Leaders Clinics

  22. Unique factors • Intersectoral collaboration • Surveillance & evaluation • Community participation • Quality of teacher training • Buy-in of teachers • Support for teachers as leaders • Not a high demand for equipment, but space is required

  23. Development & enhancement of skills Maximises existing community strengths and resources Programme ownership by school and community Sustainability

  24. Nutrition • Secondary focus of CHIPS intervention • Feeding schemes: policy vs. practice • Importance and feasibility

  25. Future research avenues • Baseline assessment - quantitative & qualitative • Comparison to national physiological data • Changes attributed to intervention • Other areas for intervention (e.g. nutrition) • Provide evidence to support expansion • Factors responsible for intervention fidelity/success

  26. Thank you

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