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Impact of a School Health Coordinator Intervention on Health-Related School Policies and Student Behavior
Authors:Liam M. O’brien PhD  Michele Polacsek PhD  MHS  Pamela B. MacDonald MPH  Jacqueline Ellis MS  CHES  Susan Berry BS  Maurice Martin PhD  CHES
Affiliation:1. Senior Research Scientist, (mpolacsek@mcph.org), Maine Harvard Prevention Research Center, One Weston Court Suite 109, Augusta, ME 04330.;2. Evaluator, (pbrunomac@earthlink.net), Healthy Maine Partnerships Initiative, Maine Center for Public Health, One Weston Court, Suite 109, Augusta, ME 04330.;3. Director of Coordinated School Health Programs, (jaki.ellis@myfairpoint.net), Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention 11 SHS, 286 Water St, Augusta, ME 04333.;4. Director of Coordinated School Health Programs, (susan.berry@maine.gov), Maine Department of Education, 23 State House Station, Augusta, ME, 04333.;5. Assistant Professor, (maurice.martin@maine.edu), Department of Community Health and Recreation, University of Maine at Farmington, Farmington, ME 04938.
Abstract:BACKGROUND: Health-related, school-based interventions may serve to prevent disease and improve academic performance. The Healthy Maine Partnerships (HMP) initiative funded local school health coordinators (SHCs) as a part of Maine's Coordinated School Health Program (CSHP) beginning in January 2001. SHCs established school health leadership teams and implemented annual work plans to address health risk behaviors. This study evaluates the impact of the Healthy Maine Partnerships SHC (HMPSHC) intervention on school policies and student risk behaviors after its first 5 years. METHODS: Data sources include the Maine School Health Profiles Survey and the Maine Youth Drug and Alcohol Use Survey/Youth Tobacco Survey. Cross-sectional analyses were performed on 2006 data to assess physical activity, nutrition, and tobacco-related policy associations with the HMPSHC intervention. Finally, policy and student behavior analyses were conducted to assess associations. RESULTS: Intervention schools were more likely to be associated with physical activity intramural offerings, improved nutritional offerings, and tobacco cessation programs. In intervention schools, supportive school policies were associated with decreased soda consumption, decreased inactivity, and decreased tobacco use. Required school health education curricula were more predictive of decreased risk behavior in intervention schools than in nonintervention schools. CONCLUSIONS: In schools with SHCs, there exists a stronger association with improved school programs. Improved policies and programs were associated with decreases in risk behavior among students in intervention schools. The HMPSHC intervention may be a viable CSHP model to replicate and evaluate in other settings.
Keywords:policy  school health instruction  risk factors  physical fitness and sport  nutrition and diet  smoking and tobacco
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