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Protect your skin and let the fun begin: The results of an intervention to improve NSW primary schools’ implementation of the SunSmart Program
Author(s) -
Wright Bradley,
Winslade Matthew,
Dudley Dean,
Cotton Wayne,
Hamer Alexandra
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
health promotion journal of australia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.515
H-Index - 32
eISSN - 2201-1617
pISSN - 1036-1073
DOI - 10.1002/hpja.27
Subject(s) - incentive , intervention (counseling) , baseline (sea) , medical education , randomized controlled trial , sun protection , medicine , behaviour change , data collection , health promotion , cluster randomised controlled trial , psychology , nursing , public health , environmental health , oceanography , statistics , surgery , mathematics , economics , microeconomics , geology
Issue addressed The SunSmart Policy Support and Intervention Study ( SSPSIS ) ( ACTRN 12614000926639) investigated the feasibility of improving schools’ implementation of the SunSmart Program, which is a resource for primary school communities to support their development of a comprehensive sun protection policy. Methods A cluster randomised controlled trial ( RCT ) was used to evaluate the SSPSIS , which was conducted in NSW SunSmart schools (n = 20). Objective measurements of students’ sun‐safe hat‐wearing behaviours and sunscreen application, and teachers’ role‐modelling behaviours, were collected for baseline, post‐test and follow‐up data. Interviews with school community stakeholders, including students (n = 103), parents (n = 31), teachers (n = 11) and executive staff (n = 4), were conducted to inform the intervention design, which was implemented following baseline data collection. Results The results of baseline observations and interviews have been published previously. The intervention design aimed to combat negative perceptions of hat‐wearing policy and create a trigger for sunscreen application by rewarding students practising these sun protection behaviours with play‐based incentives. Although this intervention had no significant effect on the wearing of sun‐safe hats among students or teachers, it did have a large effect on the consumption of sunscreen. Conclusions Associating sunscreen and play‐based incentives can create an effective trigger for students’ sunscreen application behaviours. However, further evidence is needed to investigate how students’ and teacher role models’ hat‐wearing behaviours could be increased. So what? While combining a play‐based incentive with a trigger for behaviour can promptly increase students’ sunscreen application, it was unable to increase students’ or teacher role models’ hat‐wearing behaviours.