Parent Reports Of Sun Safety Communication And Behaviour For Students In A Randomised Trial On A School Policy Implementation Intervention

AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH(2020)

引用 2|浏览14
暂无评分
摘要
Objective: Schools are an important setting for skin cancer prevention. An intervention for implementation of school sun safety policy, Sun Safety Schools (SSS), was evaluated.Methods: Primary schools (n=118) in California school districts that had already adopted a sun safety policy were enrolled in a study with a randomised controlled design. Half of the schools were randomised to SSS intervention (N=58). Parents completed an online post-test.Results: More parents in intervention schools received information about sun safety (mean=26.3%, sd=3.1%, p=0.017) and children more frequently wore sun-protective clothing when not at school (mean=2.93, sd=0.03, p=0.033) than in control schools (mean=18.0%, sd=2.5%; mean=2.83, sd=0.03, respectively). In schools where principals reported implementing sun safety practices, parents reported that children spent less time outdoors at midday (mean=14.78 hours, sd=0.25, p=0.033) and fewer were sunburned (mean=12.7%, sd=1.1%, p=0.009) than in non-implementing schools (M=16.3 hours, sd=0.67; mean=21.2%, sd=3.8%, respectively). Parents who received sun safety information (mean=3.08, sd=0.04, p=0.008) reported more child sun protection than parents not receiving information (mean=2.96, sd=0.02).Conclusions: A school district sun protection policy and support for implementation increased dissemination of sun safety information to parents and student sun safety.Implications for public health: Technical assistance for sun safety policies may increase sun protection of children.
更多
查看译文
关键词
cancer, skin, prevention, school, policy
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要