1. Local school district adoption of state-recommended policies on HIV prevention education
- Author
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Tim Hack, Stephen W. Banspach, Richard J. Sawyer, Carol Goodenow, Rebecca Ledsky, David K. Lohrmann, and Susan M. Blake
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Epidemiology ,Prevention education ,education ,Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) ,Public policy ,HIV Infections ,Public Policy ,Sex Education ,medicine.disease_cause ,Nursing ,Agency (sociology) ,medicine ,Humans ,Curriculum ,School Health Services ,Analysis of Variance ,Medical education ,Chi-Square Distribution ,business.industry ,Public health ,Professional development ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Massachusetts ,Diffusion of Innovation ,School health ,business ,State Government - Abstract
Background. This study evaluated the extent to which school districts in Massachusetts adopted HIV education policies consistent with state education agency recommendations, and whether adoption of state-recommended policy language was associated with other core components of school-based HIV prevention programs such as staff development, curriculum, and implementation characteristics. Methods. A census of health coordinators (n = 251) and high school HIV teachers (n = 174) in randomly selected schools in Massachusetts were surveyed. Chi-squares and analysis of variance (ANOVAs) were used to analyze data. Results. Most districts' policies fully incorporated state-recommended language for training HIV teachers (62%), providing HIV education within comprehensive sexuality education (62%), and providing skills-based instruction (57%). Districts adopting state-recommended policies were significantly more likely to have trained more HIV teachers (82% vs. 59% of teachers trained; P < 0.001), provided HIV education to a greater percentage of students (90% vs. 50% of students educated; P < 0.001), and adopted research-based curricula (44% vs. 27%; P < 0.01). High school teachers who received training and those using research-based curricula covered more HIV prevention topics and used more skills-based instructional methods than those who did not receive training or did not use research-based curricula (P < 0.01). Conclusions. Results suggest that strong, state-level HIV prevention education policy recommendations can help shape local school health policy and, when adopted locally, can positively influence the reach and quality of HIV education.
- Published
- 2005