22 results on '"Bonell C"'
Search Results
2. Cost-Utility Analysis of a Complex Intervention to Reduce School-Based Bullying and Aggression: An Analysis of the Inclusive RCT.
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Legood R, Opondo C, Warren E, Jamal F, Bonell C, Viner R, and Sadique Z
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- Adolescent, Adolescent Behavior, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Female, Health Promotion economics, Humans, Male, Prospective Studies, Quality of Life, Quality-Adjusted Life Years, School Health Services economics, United Kingdom, Bullying prevention & control, Health Promotion organization & administration, School Health Services organization & administration
- Abstract
Objectives: Bullying and aggression among children and young people are key public mental health priorities. In this study, we evaluated the cost-effectiveness of a complex school-based intervention to address these outcomes within a large-cluster randomized trial (Inclusive)., Methods: Forty state secondary schools were randomly allocated (1:1) to receive the intervention or continue with current practice as controls. Data were collected using paper questionnaires completed in classrooms including measures of their health-related quality of life using the Childhood Utility Index and police and National Health Service resource use. Further detailed data were collected on the cost of delivering the intervention. We calculated incremental cost-effectiveness ratios following the intention-to-treat principle using multilevel linear regression models that allowed for clustering of pupils at the school level., Results: Overall, we found that the intervention was highly cost-effective, with cost-per quality-adjusted life year thresholds of £13 284 and £1875 at 2 years and 3 years, respectively. Analysis of uncertainty in the result at 2 years revealed a 65% chance of being cost-effective, but after 3 years there was a 90% chance that it was cost-effective., Conclusion: This study provides strong evidence collected prospectively from a randomized study that this school-based intervention is highly cost-effective. Education- and health-sector policy makers should consider investment in scaling up this intervention., (Copyright © 2020 ISPOR–The Professional Society for Health Economics and Outcomes Research. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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3. Determining the optimal strategy for reopening schools, the impact of test and trace interventions, and the risk of occurrence of a second COVID-19 epidemic wave in the UK: a modelling study.
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Panovska-Griffiths J, Kerr CC, Stuart RM, Mistry D, Klein DJ, Viner RM, and Bonell C
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- Adolescent, Betacoronavirus, COVID-19, COVID-19 Testing, Child, Disease Outbreaks prevention & control, Humans, Models, Theoretical, SARS-CoV-2, Schools organization & administration, Civil Defense methods, Civil Defense organization & administration, Clinical Laboratory Techniques methods, Clinical Laboratory Techniques standards, Communicable Disease Control methods, Communicable Disease Control organization & administration, Contact Tracing methods, Coronavirus Infections diagnosis, Coronavirus Infections epidemiology, Coronavirus Infections prevention & control, Coronavirus Infections transmission, Disease Transmission, Infectious prevention & control, Pandemics prevention & control, Pneumonia, Viral epidemiology, Pneumonia, Viral prevention & control, Pneumonia, Viral transmission, School Health Services organization & administration
- Abstract
Background: As lockdown measures to slow the spread of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection begin to ease in the UK, it is important to assess the impact of any changes in policy, including school reopening and broader relaxation of physical distancing measures. We aimed to use an individual-based model to predict the impact of two possible strategies for reopening schools to all students in the UK from September, 2020, in combination with different assumptions about relaxation of physical distancing measures and the scale-up of testing., Methods: In this modelling study, we used Covasim, a stochastic individual-based model for transmission of SARS-CoV-2, calibrated to the UK epidemic. The model describes individuals' contact networks stratified into household, school, workplace, and community layers, and uses demographic and epidemiological data from the UK. We simulated six different scenarios, representing the combination of two school reopening strategies (full time and a part-time rota system with 50% of students attending school on alternate weeks) and three testing scenarios (68% contact tracing with no scale-up in testing, 68% contact tracing with sufficient testing to avoid a second COVID-19 wave, and 40% contact tracing with sufficient testing to avoid a second COVID-19 wave). We estimated the number of new infections, cases, and deaths, as well as the effective reproduction number (R) under different strategies. In a sensitivity analysis to account for uncertainties within the stochastic simulation, we also simulated infectiousness of children and young adults aged younger than 20 years at 50% relative to older ages (20 years and older)., Findings: With increased levels of testing (between 59% and 87% of symptomatic people tested at some point during an active SARS-CoV-2 infection, depending on the scenario), and effective contact tracing and isolation, an epidemic rebound might be prevented. Assuming 68% of contacts could be traced, we estimate that 75% of individuals with symptomatic infection would need to be tested and positive cases isolated if schools return full-time in September, or 65% if a part-time rota system were used. If only 40% of contacts could be traced, these figures would increase to 87% and 75%, respectively. However, without these levels of testing and contact tracing, reopening of schools together with gradual relaxing of the lockdown measures are likely to induce a second wave that would peak in December, 2020, if schools open full-time in September, and in February, 2021, if a part-time rota system were adopted. In either case, the second wave would result in R rising above 1 and a resulting second wave of infections 2·0-2·3 times the size of the original COVID-19 wave. When infectiousness of children and young adults was varied from 100% to 50% of that of older ages, we still found that a comprehensive and effective test-trace-isolate strategy would be required to avoid a second COVID-19 wave., Interpretation: To prevent a second COVID-19 wave, relaxation of physical distancing, including reopening of schools, in the UK must be accompanied by large-scale, population-wide testing of symptomatic individuals and effective tracing of their contacts, followed by isolation of diagnosed individuals., Funding: None., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2020
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4. The sustainability of public health interventions in schools: a systematic review.
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Herlitz L, MacIntyre H, Osborn T, and Bonell C
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- Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Health Behavior, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Health Promotion economics, Health Promotion statistics & numerical data, Humans, Mental Health, Motivation, School Health Services economics, School Health Services statistics & numerical data, Time Factors, World Health Organization, Health Promotion organization & administration, Public Health, School Health Services organization & administration
- Abstract
Background: The sustainability of school-based health interventions after external funds and/or other resources end has been relatively unexplored in comparison to health care. If effective interventions discontinue, new practices cannot reach wider student populations and investment in implementation is wasted. This review asked: What evidence exists about the sustainability of school-based public health interventions? Do schools sustain public health interventions once start-up funds end? What are the barriers and facilitators affecting the sustainability of public health interventions in schools in high-income countries?, Methods: Seven bibliographic databases and 15 websites were searched. References and citations of included studies were searched, and experts and authors were contacted to identify relevant studies. We included reports published from 1996 onwards. References were screened on title/abstract, and those included were screened on full report. We conducted data extraction and appraisal using an existing tool. Extracted data were qualitatively synthesised for common themes, using May's General Theory of Implementation (2013) as a conceptual framework., Results: Of the 9677 unique references identified through database searching and other search strategies, 24 studies of 18 interventions were included in the review. No interventions were sustained in their entirety; all had some components that were sustained by some schools or staff, bar one that was completely discontinued. No discernible relationship was found between evidence of effectiveness and sustainability. Key facilitators included commitment/support from senior leaders, staff observing a positive impact on students' engagement and wellbeing, and staff confidence in delivering health promotion and belief in its value. Important contextual barriers emerged: the norm of prioritising educational outcomes under time and resource constraints, insufficient funding/resources, staff turnover and a lack of ongoing training. Adaptation of the intervention to existing routines and changing contexts appeared to be part of the sustainability process., Conclusions: Existing evidence suggests that sustainability depends upon schools developing and retaining senior leaders and staff that are knowledgeable, skilled and motivated to continue delivering health promotion through ever-changing circumstances. Evidence of effectiveness did not appear to be an influential factor. However, methodologically stronger primary research, informed by theory, is needed., Trial Registration: The review was registered on PROSPERO: CRD42017076320, Sep. 2017.
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- 2020
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5. Effects of Interventions Addressing School Environments or Educational Assets on Adolescent Sexual Health: Systematic Review and Meta-analysis.
- Author
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Peterson AJ, Donze M, Allen E, and Bonell C
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- Adolescent, Adolescent Behavior, Environment, Female, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Humans, Male, Program Evaluation, Sexual Behavior, Adolescent Health, School Health Services, Sex Education methods, Sexual Health, Students psychology
- Abstract
Context: School-based interventions that aim to modify sexual health knowledge, attitudes and behaviors have mixed and often unsustained effects on adolescent sexual health outcomes. However, observational evidence suggests that broader school-related factors, such as school climate and academic attainment, can influence outcomes., Methods: Nine databases were searched in July 2017 for randomized and quasi-experimental evaluations of interventions addressing school-level environment or student-level educational assets, to examine whether such interventions can promote young people's sexual health. Searches were limited to studies published since 1990 but were not restricted by language. Studies were assessed for risk of bias and synthesized narratively and meta-analytically., Results: Searches yielded 11 evaluations, published from 1999 to 2016, of interventions related to school-level environment or student-level educational assets. Because of inconsistent reporting, the risk of bias was not clear for most studies, and meta-analysis was possible for only one outcome. The meta-analysis of three randomized trials provided some evidence that school-environment interventions may delay sexual debut (pooled odds ratio, 0.5). Narrative synthesis of the remaining outcomes found mixed results, but suggests that interventions addressing school-level environment may delay sexual debut and that those addressing student-level educational assets may reduce risk of pregnancy and STDs., Conclusions: Additional and more rigorous evidence is needed to assess the probability that interventions addressing school-related factors are effective and to provide better understanding of the mechanisms by which they may work to improve adolescent sexual health., (Copyright © 2019 by the Guttmacher Institute.)
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- 2019
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6. JACK trial protocol: a phase III multicentre cluster randomised controlled trial of a school-based relationship and sexuality education intervention focusing on young male perspectives.
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Lohan M, Aventin Á, Clarke M, Curran RM, Maguire L, Hunter R, McDowell C, McDaid L, Young H, White J, Fletcher A, French R, Bonell C, Bailey JV, and O'Hare L
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- Adolescent, Cluster Analysis, Contraception, Female, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Humans, Male, Peer Group, Pregnancy, Pregnancy in Adolescence psychology, Sexual Behavior, Sexually Transmitted Diseases psychology, United Kingdom epidemiology, Adolescent Behavior psychology, Clinical Trials, Phase III as Topic, Multicenter Studies as Topic, Pregnancy in Adolescence prevention & control, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, School Health Services, Sex Education, Sexually Transmitted Diseases prevention & control
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Introduction: Teenage pregnancy remains a worldwide health concern which is an outcome of, and contributor to, health inequalities. The need for gender-aware interventions with a focus on males in addressing teenage pregnancy has been highlighted as a global health need by WHO and identified in systematic reviews of (relationship and sexuality education (RSE)). This study aims to test the effectiveness of an interactive film-based RSE intervention, which draws explicit attention to the role of males in preventing an unintended pregnancy by reducing unprotected heterosexual teenage sex among males and females under age 16 years., Methods and Analysis: A phase III cluster randomised trial with embedded process and economic evaluations. If I Were Jack encompasses a culturally sensitive interactive film, classroom materials, a teacher-trainer session and parent animations and will be delivered to replace some of the usual RSE for the target age group in schools in the intervention group. Schools in the control group will not receive the intervention and will continue with usual RSE. Participants will not be blinded to allocation. Schools are the unit of randomisation stratified per country and socioeconomic status. We aim to recruit 66 UK schools (24 in Northern Ireland; 14 in each of England, Scotland and Wales), including approximately 7900 pupils. A questionnaire will be administered at baseline and at 12-14 months postintervention. The primary outcome is reported unprotected sex, a surrogate measure associated with unintended teenage pregnancy. Secondary outcomes include knowledge, attitudes, skills and intentions relating to avoiding teenage pregnancy in addition to frequency of engagement in sexual intercourse, contraception use and diagnosis of sexually transmitted infections., Ethics and Dissemination: Ethical approval was obtained from Queen's University Belfast. Results will be published in peer-reviewed journals and disseminated to stakeholders. Funding is from the National Institute for Health Research., Trial Registration Number: ISRCTN99459996., Competing Interests: Competing interests: QUB holds copyright and the researchers do not benefit financially from its evaluation or use., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2018. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.)
- Published
- 2018
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7. Does integrated academic and health education prevent substance use? Systematic review and meta-analyses.
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Melendez-Torres GJ, Tancred T, Fletcher A, Thomas J, Campbell R, and Bonell C
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- Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Health Education methods, Humans, Program Evaluation, Adolescent Health, Child Health, Health Education standards, School Health Services standards, Students psychology, Substance-Related Disorders prevention & control
- Abstract
Background: Prevention of substance (alcohol, tobacco, illegal/legal drug) use in adolescents is a public health priority. As the scope for school-based health education is constrained in school timetables, interventions integrating academic and health education have gained traction in the UK and elsewhere, though evidence for their effectiveness remains unclear. We sought to synthesize the effectiveness of interventions integrating academic and health education for the prevention of substance use., Methods: We searched 19 databases between November and December 2015, among other methods. We included randomized trials of interventions integrating academic and health education targeting school students aged 4-18 and reporting substance use outcomes. We excluded interventions for specific health-related subpopulations (e.g., children with behavioural difficulties). Data were extracted independently in duplicate. Outcomes were synthesized by school key stage (KS) using multilevel meta-analyses, for substance use, overall and by type., Results: We identified 7 trials reporting substance use. Interventions reduced substance use generally in years 7-9 (KS3) based on 5 evaluations (d = -0.09, 95% CI [-0.17, -0.01], I
2 = 35%), as well as in years 10-11 (KS4) based on 3 evaluations (-0.06, [-0.09, -0.02]; I2 = 0%). Interventions were broadly effective for reducing specific alcohol, tobacco, and drug use in both KS groups., Conclusions: Evidence quality was highly variable. Findings for years 3-6 and 12-13 could not be meta-analysed, and we could not assess publication bias. Interventions appear to have a small but significant effect reducing substance use. Specific methods of integrating academic and health education remain poorly understood., (© 2018 The Authors. Child: Care, Health and Development Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)- Published
- 2018
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8. Integrating Health Education in Academic Lessons: Is This the Future of Health Education in Schools?
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Tancred T, Fletcher A, Melendez-Torres GJ, Thomas J, Campbell R, and Bonell C
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- Humans, United Kingdom, Health Education methods, School Health Services organization & administration
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- 2017
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9. Development of a framework for the co-production and prototyping of public health interventions.
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Hawkins J, Madden K, Fletcher A, Midgley L, Grant A, Cox G, Moore L, Campbell R, Murphy S, Bonell C, and White J
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- Adolescent, Female, Focus Groups, Humans, Male, Peer Group, United Kingdom, Health Education organization & administration, Models, Organizational, Public Health Practice, School Health Services organization & administration, Smoking Prevention organization & administration
- Abstract
Background: Existing guidance for developing public health interventions does not provide information for researchers about how to work with intervention providers to co-produce and prototype the content and delivery of new interventions prior to evaluation. The ASSIST + Frank study aimed to adapt an existing effective peer-led smoking prevention intervention (ASSIST), integrating new content from the UK drug education resource Talk to Frank ( www.talktofrank.com ) to co-produce two new school-based peer-led drug prevention interventions. A three-stage framework was tested to adapt and develop intervention content and delivery methods in collaboration with key stakeholders to facilitate implementation., Methods: The three stages of the framework were: 1) Evidence review and stakeholder consultation; 2) Co-production; 3) Prototyping. During stage 1, six focus groups, 12 consultations, five interviews, and nine observations of intervention delivery were conducted with key stakeholders (e.g. Public Health Wales [PHW] ASSIST delivery team, teachers, school students, health professionals). During stage 2, an intervention development group consisting of members of the research team and the PHW ASSIST delivery team was established to adapt existing, and co-produce new, intervention activities. In stage 3, intervention training and content were iteratively prototyped using process data on fidelity and acceptability to key stakeholders. Stages 2 and 3 took the form of an action-research process involving a series of face-to-face meetings, email exchanges, observations, and training sessions., Results: Utilising the three-stage framework, we co-produced and tested intervention content and delivery methods for the two interventions over a period of 18 months involving external partners. New and adapted intervention activities, as well as refinements in content, the format of delivery, timing and sequencing of activities, and training manuals resulted from this process. The involvement of intervention delivery staff, participants and teachers shaped the content and format of the interventions, as well as supporting rapid prototyping in context at the final stage., Conclusions: This three-stage framework extends current guidance on intervention development by providing step-by-step instructions for co-producing and prototyping an intervention's content and delivery processes prior to piloting and formal evaluation. This framework enhances existing guidance and could be transferred to co-produce and prototype other public health interventions., Trial Registration: ISRCTN14415936 , registered retrospectively on 05 November 2014.
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- 2017
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10. What is best practice in sex and relationship education? A synthesis of evidence, including stakeholders' views.
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Pound P, Denford S, Shucksmith J, Tanton C, Johnson AM, Owen J, Hutten R, Mohan L, Bonell C, Abraham C, and Campbell R
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- Adolescent, England, Female, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Humans, Male, Schools, Sex Factors, Sexually Transmitted Diseases prevention & control, Sexually Transmitted Diseases transmission, Surveys and Questionnaires, Young Adult, Safe Sex, School Health Services standards, Sex Education standards, Sex Education trends, Sexuality
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Objectives: Sex and relationship education (SRE) is regarded as vital to improving young people's sexual health, but a third of schools in England lacks good SRE and government guidance is outdated. We aimed to identify what makes SRE programmes effective, acceptable, sustainable and capable of faithful implementation., Design: This is a synthesis of findings from five research packages that we conducted (practitioner interviews, case study investigation, National Survey of Sexual Attitudes and Lifestyles, review of reviews and qualitative synthesis). We also gained feedback on our research from stakeholder consultations., Settings: Primary research and stakeholder consultations were conducted in the UK. Secondary research draws on studies worldwide., Results: Our findings indicate that school-based SRE and school-linked sexual health services can be effective at improving sexual health. We found professional consensus that good programmes start in primary school. Professionals and young people agreed that good programmes are age-appropriate, interactive and take place in a safe environment. Some young women reported preferring single-sex classes, but young men appeared to want mixed classes. Young people and professionals agreed that SRE should take a 'life skills' approach and not focus on abstinence. Young people advocated a 'sex-positive' approach but reported this was lacking. Young people and professionals agreed that SRE should discuss risks, but young people indicated that approaches to risk need revising. Professionals felt teachers should be involved in SRE delivery, but many young people reported disliking having their teachers deliver SRE and we found that key messages could become lost when interpreted by teachers. The divergence between young people and professionals was echoed by stakeholders. We developed criteria for best practice based on the evidence., Conclusions: We identified key features of effective and acceptable SRE. Our best practice criteria can be used to evaluate existing programmes, contribute to the development of new programmes and inform consultations around statutory SRE., Competing Interests: Competing interests: AMJ has been a Governor of the Wellcome Trust since 2011. All other authors have no competing interest to decline., (© Article author(s) (or their employer(s) unless otherwise stated in the text of the article) 2017. All rights reserved. No commercial use is permitted unless otherwise expressly granted.)
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- 2017
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11. The Health Promoting Schools Framework: Known Unknowns and an Agenda for Future Research.
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Langford R, Bonell C, Komro K, Murphy S, Magnus D, Waters E, Gibbs L, and Campbell R
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- Forecasting, Humans, Obesity prevention & control, Socioeconomic Factors, Adolescent Health, Biomedical Research, Child Health, School Health Services, Students
- Abstract
The World Health Organization's Health Promoting Schools (HPS) framework is a whole-school approach to promoting health that recognizes the intrinsic relationship between health and education. Our recent Cochrane systematic review found HPS interventions produced improvements in a number of student health outcomes. Here we reflect on what this review was not able to tell us: in other words, what evidence is missing with regard to the HPS approach. Few HPS interventions engage with schools' "core business" by examining impacts on educational outcomes. Current evidence is dominated by obesity interventions, with most studies conducted with children rather than adolescents. Evidence is lacking for outcomes such as mental or sexual health, substance use, and violence. Activities to engage families and communities are currently weak and unlikely to prompt behavioral change. The HPS approach is largely absent in low-income settings, despite its potential in meeting children's basic health needs. Intervention theories are insufficiently complex, often ignoring upstream determinants of health. Few studies provide evidence on intervention sustainability or cost-effectiveness, nor in-depth contextual or process data. We set out an agenda for future school health promotion research, considering implications for key stakeholders, namely, national governments, research funders, academics, and schools.
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- 2017
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12. Initiating change locally in bullying and aggression through the school environment (INCLUSIVE) trial: update to cluster randomised controlled trial protocol.
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Bonell C, Mathiot A, Allen E, Bevilacqua L, Christie D, Elbourne D, Fletcher A, Grieve R, Legood R, Scott S, Warren E, Wiggins M, and Viner RM
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- Adolescent, Age Factors, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Emotions, England, Humans, Learning, Research Design, Social Behavior, Time Factors, Adolescent Behavior, Aggression, Bullying prevention & control, Environment, School Health Services economics, Schools economics, Students psychology
- Abstract
Background: Systematic reviews suggest that multi-component interventions are effective in reducing bullying victimisation and perpetration. We are undertaking a phase III randomised trial of the INCLUSIVE multi-component intervention. This trial aims to assess the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of the INCLUSIVE intervention in reducing aggression and bullying victimisation in English secondary schools. This paper updates the original trial protocol published in 2014 (Trials 15:381, 2014) and presents the changes in the process evaluation protocol and the secondary outcome data collection., Methods: The methods are summarised as follows., Design: cluster randomised trial., Participants: 40 state secondary schools. Outcomes assessed among the cohort of students at the end of year 7 (n = 6667) at baseline., Intervention: INCLUSIVE is a multi-component school intervention including a social and emotional learning curriculum, changes to school environment (an action group comprising staff and students reviews local data on needs to review rules and policies and determine other local actions) and staff training in restorative practice. The intervention will be delivered by schools supported in the first two years by educational facilitators independent of the research team, with a third intervention year involving no external facilitation but all other elements. Comparator: normal practice., Outcomes: Primary: Two primary outcomes at student level assessed at baseline and at 36 months: 1. Aggressive behaviours in school: Edinburgh Study of Youth Transitions and Crime school misbehaviour subscale (ESYTC) 2. Bullying and victimisation: Gatehouse Bullying Scale (GBS) Secondary outcomes assessed at baseline, 24 and 36 months will include measures relating to the economic evaluation, psychosocial outcomes in students and staff and school-level truancy and exclusion rates., Sample Size: 20 schools per arm will provide 90% power to identify an effect size of 0.25 SD with a 5% significance level. Randomisation: eligible consenting schools were randomised stratified for single-sex versus mixed-sex schools, school-level deprivation and measures of school attainment., Discussion: The trial involves independent research and intervention teams and is supervised by a Trial Steering Committee and a Data Monitoring Committee., Trial Registration: Current Controlled Trials, ISRCTN10751359 . Registered on 11 March 2014.
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- 2017
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13. Our future: a Lancet commission on adolescent health and wellbeing.
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Patton GC, Sawyer SM, Santelli JS, Ross DA, Afifi R, Allen NB, Arora M, Azzopardi P, Baldwin W, Bonell C, Kakuma R, Kennedy E, Mahon J, McGovern T, Mokdad AH, Patel V, Petroni S, Reavley N, Taiwo K, Waldfogel J, Wickremarathne D, Barroso C, Bhutta Z, Fatusi AO, Mattoo A, Diers J, Fang J, Ferguson J, Ssewamala F, and Viner RM
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- Adolescent legislation & jurisprudence, Adolescent Health Services, Age Distribution, Child, Criminals, Decision Making, Female, Global Health, Health Services Needs and Demand trends, Humans, Informed Consent legislation & jurisprudence, Intimate Partner Violence statistics & numerical data, Intimate Partner Violence trends, Male, Malnutrition epidemiology, Mental Competency legislation & jurisprudence, Obesity prevention & control, Occupational Health, Parent-Child Relations, Peer Group, Puberty, Reproductive Health, Sexual Partners, Young Adult, Adolescent Health, Developed Countries statistics & numerical data, Developing Countries statistics & numerical data, Educational Status, Marriage ethnology, Marriage legislation & jurisprudence, Marriage trends, Obesity epidemiology, School Health Services, Sexually Transmitted Diseases epidemiology, Substance-Related Disorders epidemiology, Wounds and Injuries epidemiology
- Published
- 2016
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14. School-Based Interventions Going Beyond Health Education to Promote Adolescent Health: Systematic Review of Reviews.
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Shackleton N, Jamal F, Viner RM, Dickson K, Patton G, and Bonell C
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- Adolescent, Bullying prevention & control, Female, Humans, Male, Program Evaluation, Reproductive Health education, Review Literature as Topic, Sex Education, Smoking Prevention, Adolescent Health, Health Education methods, Health Promotion, School Health Services
- Abstract
Purpose: Health education in school classrooms can be effective in promoting sexual health and preventing violence and substance use but effects are patchy and often short term. Classroom education is also challenging because of schools' increasing focus on academic-performance metrics. Other school-based approaches are possible, such as healthy school policies, improving how schools respond to bullying, and parent outreach, which go beyond health education to address broader health determinants. Existing systematic reviews include such interventions but often alongside traditional health education. There is scope for a systematic review of reviews to assess and synthesize evidence across existing reviews to develop an overview of the potential of alternative school-based approaches., Methods: We searched 12 databases to identify reviews published after 1980. Data were reviewed by two researchers. Quality was assessed using a modified Assessing the Methodological Quality of Systematic Reviews checklist and results were synthesized narratively., Results: We screened 7,544 unique references and included 22 reviews. Our syntheses suggest that multicomponent school-based interventions, for example, including school policy changes, parent involvement, and work with local communities, are effective for promoting sexual health and preventing bullying and smoking. There is less evidence that such intervention can reduce alcohol and drug use. Economic incentives to keep girls in school can reduce teenage pregnancies. School clinics can promote smoking cessation. There is little evidence that, on their own, sexual-health clinics, antismoking policies, and various approaches targeting at-risk students are effective., Conclusions: There is good evidence that various whole-school health interventions are effective in preventing teenage pregnancy, smoking, and bullying., (Copyright © 2016 Society for Adolescent Health and Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2016
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15. Consulting with young people to inform systematic reviews: an example from a review on the effects of schools on health.
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Jamal F, Langford R, Daniels P, Thomas J, Harden A, and Bonell C
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- Adolescent, Biomedical Research, Decision Making, Humans, Methods, Young Adult, Health Status, Referral and Consultation, School Health Services, Systematic Reviews as Topic
- Abstract
Background: There has been increasing interest in involving the public in systematic reviews as they provide a shortcut to the evidence and arguably have greater influence over policy decisions and ultimately people's lives. Case examples of this involvement are rare, especially for reviews focused on children and young people. This study describes the process and impact of consulting with a young people's advisory group to inform decision making in a systematic review on the effects of schools and school environment interventions on children and young people's health., Methods: Consultations were conducted with a pre-existing group of young people brought together to advise on public health research. Their views were sought at two key stages: (i) at the beginning when general views relating to the policy problem under study were elicited; and (ii) half-way through to advise on how to focus the review on key priorities., Results: Young people's involvement in our review ensured that the scope of our review was appropriate and that issues which were important to young people were considered. The group was especially valuable in terms of prioritizing in a relevant and meaningful way. A crucial additional impact of involvement was young people providing 'early signals' of key themes for the synthesis., (© 2014 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2015
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16. Obesity prevention and the Health promoting Schools framework: essential components and barriers to success.
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Langford R, Bonell C, Jones H, and Campbell R
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- Adolescent, Child, Humans, Students, Health Behavior, Health Promotion methods, Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care, Pediatric Obesity prevention & control, School Health Services, Schools
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Background: Obesity is an important public health issue. Finding ways to increase physical activity and improve nutrition, particularly in children, is a clear priority. Our Cochrane review of the World Health Organization's Health Promoting Schools (HPS) framework found this approach improved students' physical activity and fitness, and increased fruit and vegetable intake. However, there was considerable heterogeneity in reported impacts. This paper synthesises process evaluation data from these studies to identify factors that might explain this variability., Methods: We searched 20 health, education and social-science databases, and trials registries and relevant websites in 2011 and 2013. No language or date restrictions were applied. We included cluster randomised controlled trials. Participants were school students aged 4-18 years. Studies were included if they: took an HPS approach (targeting curriculum, environment and family/community); focused on physical activity and/or nutrition; and presented process evaluation data. A framework approach was used to facilitate thematic analysis and synthesis of process data., Results: Twenty-six studies met the inclusion criteria. Most were conducted in America or Europe, with children aged 12 years or younger. Although interventions were acceptable to students and teachers, fidelity varied considerably across trials. Involving families, while an intrinsic element of the HPS approach, was viewed as highly challenging. Several themes emerged regarding which elements of interventions were critical for success: tailoring programmes to individual schools' needs; aligning interventions with schools' core aims; working with teachers to develop programmes; and providing on-going training and support. An emphasis on academic subjects and lack of institutional support were barriers to implementation., Conclusions: Stronger alliances between health and education appear essential to intervention success. Researchers must work with schools to develop and implement interventions, and to evaluate their impact on both health and educational outcomes as this may be a key determinant of scalability. If family engagement is attempted, better ways to achieve this must be developed and evaluated. Further evaluations of interventions to promote physical activity and nutrition during adolescence are needed. Finally, process evaluations must move beyond simple measures of acceptability/fidelity to include detailed contextual information to illuminate exactly what works, for whom, in what contexts and why.
- Published
- 2015
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17. The World Health Organization's Health Promoting Schools framework: a Cochrane systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Langford R, Bonell C, Jones H, Pouliou T, Murphy S, Waters E, Komro K, Gibbs L, Magnus D, and Campbell R
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- Achievement, Adolescent, Body Mass Index, Child, Child, Preschool, Diet, Female, Fruit, Humans, Male, Mental Health, Physical Fitness, Program Evaluation, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, World Health Organization, Health Behavior, School Health Services organization & administration, School Health Services statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background: Healthy children achieve better educational outcomes which, in turn, are associated with improved health later in life. The World Health Organization's Health Promoting Schools (HPS) framework is a holistic approach to promoting health and educational attainment in school. The effectiveness of this approach has not yet been rigorously reviewed., Methods: We searched 20 health, education and social science databases, and trials registries and relevant websites in 2011 and 2013. We included cluster randomised controlled trials. Participants were children and young people aged four to 18 years attending schools/colleges. HPS interventions had to include the following three elements: input into the curriculum; changes to the school's ethos or environment; and engagement with families and/or local communities. Two reviewers identified relevant trials, extracted data and assessed risk of bias. We grouped studies according to the health topic(s) targeted. Where data permitted, we performed random-effects meta-analyses., Results: We identified 67 eligible trials tackling a range of health issues. Few studies included any academic/attendance outcomes. We found positive average intervention effects for: body mass index (BMI), physical activity, physical fitness, fruit and vegetable intake, tobacco use, and being bullied. Intervention effects were generally small. On average across studies, we found little evidence of effectiveness for zBMI (BMI, standardized for age and gender), and no evidence for fat intake, alcohol use, drug use, mental health, violence and bullying others. It was not possible to meta-analyse data on other health outcomes due to lack of data. Methodological limitations were identified including reliance on self-reported data, lack of long-term follow-up, and high attrition rates., Conclusion: This Cochrane review has found the WHO HPS framework is effective at improving some aspects of student health. The effects are small but potentially important at a population level.
- Published
- 2015
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18. Why schools should promote students' health and wellbeing.
- Author
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Bonell C, Humphrey N, Fletcher A, Moore L, Anderson R, and Campbell R
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Personal Satisfaction, Policy Making, United Kingdom, School Health Services organization & administration, Schools, Students
- Published
- 2014
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19. The effects of the school environment on student health: a systematic review of multi-level studies.
- Author
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Bonell C, Parry W, Wells H, Jamal F, Fletcher A, Harden A, Thomas J, Campbell R, Petticrew M, Murphy S, Whitehead M, and Moore L
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Educational Status, Health Status, Humans, Schools standards, Substance-Related Disorders epidemiology, School Health Services statistics & numerical data, Schools statistics & numerical data, Students statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Health outcomes vary between schools and it is theorised that this may be partly attributable to variation in the school environment. Existing systematic reviews have not drawn authoritative conclusions because of methodological limitations in the review or studies available. We identified 42 multi-level studies, ten of which were judged of sufficient quality to narratively synthesize. There was consistent evidence that schools with higher attainment and attendance than would be expected from student intake had lower rates of substance use. Findings on the influence of smoking/alcohol policies were mixed. Three studies examined the health effects variously associated with school campus area and observability, year structure, school size and pupil-to-teacher ratio with mixed findings. The studies reviewed support the potential influence of the school environment on student health., (Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2013
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20. The long-term effects of a peer-led sex education programme (RIPPLE): a cluster randomised trial in schools in England.
- Author
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Stephenson J, Strange V, Allen E, Copas A, Johnson A, Bonell C, Babiker A, and Oakley A
- Subjects
- Adolescent, England, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Interpersonal Relations, Live Birth, Male, Pregnancy, Schools, Surveys and Questionnaires, Abortion, Induced statistics & numerical data, Peer Group, Pregnancy in Adolescence prevention & control, School Health Services trends, Sex Education methods, Sexually Transmitted Diseases prevention & control
- Abstract
Background: Peer-led sex education is widely believed to be an effective approach to reducing unsafe sex among young people, but reliable evidence from long-term studies is lacking. To assess the effectiveness of one form of school-based peer-led sex education in reducing unintended teenage pregnancy, we did a cluster (school) randomised trial with 7 y of follow-up., Methods and Findings: Twenty-seven representative schools in England, with over 9,000 pupils aged 13-14 y at baseline, took part in the trial. Schools were randomised to either peer-led sex education (intervention) or to continue their usual teacher-led sex education (control). Peer educators, aged 16-17 y, were trained to deliver three 1-h classroom sessions of sex education to 13- to 14-y-old pupils from the same schools. The sessions used participatory learning methods designed to improve the younger pupils' skills in sexual communication and condom use and their knowledge about pregnancy, sexually transmitted infections (STIs), contraception, and local sexual health services. Main outcome measures were abortion and live births by age 20 y, determined by anonymised linkage of girls to routine (statutory) data. Assessment of these outcomes was blind to sex education allocation. The proportion of girls who had one or more abortions before age 20 y was the same in each arm (intervention, 5.0% [95% confidence interval (CI) 4.0%-6.3%]; control, 5.0% [95% CI 4.0%-6.4%]). The odds ratio (OR) adjusted for randomisation strata was 1.07 (95% CI 0.80-1.42, p = 0.64, intervention versus control). The proportion of girls with one or more live births by 20.5 y was 7.5% (95% CI 5.9%-9.6%) in the intervention arm and 10.6% (95% CI 6.8%-16.1%) in the control arm, adjusted OR 0.77 (0.51-1.15). Fewer girls in the peer-led arm self-reported a pregnancy by age 18 y (7.2% intervention versus 11.2% control, adjusted OR 0.62 [95% CI 0.42-0.91], weighted for non-response; response rate 61% intervention, 45% control). There were no significant differences for girls or boys in self-reported unprotected first sex, regretted or pressured sex, quality of current sexual relationship, diagnosed sexually transmitted diseases, or ability to identify local sexual health services., Conclusion: Compared with conventional school sex education at age 13-14 y, this form of peer-led sex education was not associated with change in teenage abortions, but may have led to fewer teenage births and was popular with pupils. It merits consideration within broader teenage pregnancy prevention strategies.
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- 2008
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21. Improving school ethos may reduce substance misuse and teenage pregnancy.
- Author
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Bonell C, Fletcher A, and McCambridge J
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Female, Health Behavior, Humans, Pregnancy, Risk-Taking, Adolescent Health Services standards, Pregnancy in Adolescence prevention & control, School Health Services standards, Substance-Related Disorders prevention & control
- Published
- 2007
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22. Whole-school interventions promoting student commitment to school to prevent substance use and violence: a systematic review.
- Author
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Melendez-Torres, G.J., Ponsford, R., Falconer, J., and Bonell, C.
- Subjects
- *
SUBSTANCE abuse prevention , *PREVENTION of school violence , *SMOKING prevention , *PREVENTION of alcoholism , *SCHOOL health services , *EVALUATION of human services programs , *META-analysis , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *STUDENTS , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *COMMITMENT (Psychology) , *ODDS ratio , *HEALTH promotion - Abstract
Whole-school interventions that promote student commitment to school are a promising modality to reduce health inequalities through school-level change; however, evidence for the effectiveness of these interventions in improving policy-relevant health outcomes, such as substance use and violence, has not been comprehensively synthesised. This was a systematic review and meta-analysis. We searched 20 databases and a range of other sources to identify randomised trials meeting our intervention definition and reporting substance use and violence outcomes. Extracted effect estimates were meta-analysed using robust variance estimation with random effects, separating effects <1 year from baseline and effects at or more than 1 year from baseline. We included 18 evaluations with varying risk of bias. Pooled effects suggested significant impacts on short-term (odds ratio [OR] = 0.85, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.76, 0.96) and long-term (OR = 0.79, 95% CI 0.65, 0.98) violence perpetration, short-term (OR = 0.84, 95% CI 0.72, 0.98) and long-term (OR = 0.85, 95% CI 0.73, 0.99) violence victimisation, and short-term (OR = 0.83, 95% CI 0.70, 0.97) and long-term (OR = 0.79, 95% CI 0.62, 0.998) substance use outcomes, with effects relatively stable between short-term and long-term analyses. Stratifying substance use meta-analyses by type (e.g. smoking, alcohol) did not impact results. All meta-analyses had substantial heterogeneity. Although diverse in content, interventions appear effective with respect to the review outcomes and as a form of universal prevention. Future research should consider contextual contingencies in intervention effectiveness, given considerable policy and practice interest in these interventions and the need to support schools in effective decision-making as to intervention choice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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