British Columbia Children's Hospital, 4500 Oak Street, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
Health Promot Int. 2012 Mar;27(1):63-73. doi: 10.1093/heapro/dar039. Epub 2012 Jan 12.
Four health promoting (HP) schools were established in rural communities in Uganda by a joint Ugandan/Canadian university team. The model was based on a successful Canadian health promotion initiative designed to address poor oral health in Aboriginal children in rural and remote communities. Careful situation analysis, orientation of partner schools and collaborative development of educational materials and evaluation methodology preceded implementation. The intervention had three elements: inclusion of health topics by teachers in regular classroom activities; health education delivered by the university team to reinforce key educational concepts; and daily in-school tooth brushing to develop healthy practices. All children entering Grade 1 at four schools were recruited for 4 years; evaluation included year 1 pre-intervention and annual end-of-year data collection of quantitative and qualitative measures. Principal findings at 4 years included: an increase from baseline in the original cohort (n = 600) in those brushing at least once daily (p < 0.05) and before bed (p < 0.05); improved oral health (less 'bad breath', pain and absences for emergency dental treatment); more comprehensive health knowledge. Other positive observations were change in the schools' health culture; children sharing new health knowledge and advocating for health practices learned; and evolution of health promotion activity to address other community-identified issues following success with the initial oral health component. University faculty and students learned from participation in programme delivery and community-based educational opportunities. School-based health promotion using this oral health model was readily accepted, implemented, sustained and evaluated; all communities took ownership, and all schools continue their programmes. Addressing oral health through HP schools is novel in Africa, and several lessons learned are of potential value for similar health promotion initiatives in sub-Saharan Africa.
四个促进健康(HP)学校由一个乌干达/加拿大大学团队在乌干达农村社区建立。该模式是基于一个成功的加拿大健康促进计划,旨在解决农村和偏远社区中土著儿童的口腔健康问题。在实施之前,进行了仔细的情况分析、合作伙伴学校的定位以及教育材料和评估方法的协作开发。该干预措施有三个要素:教师将健康主题纳入常规课堂活动;由大学团队提供健康教育,以强化关键教育概念;以及每天在学校刷牙,以养成健康习惯。所有在四所学校入学一年级的儿童都参加了为期四年的研究;评估包括第一年干预前和每年年底的定量和定性数据收集。四年的主要发现包括:在原始队列(n=600)中,每天至少刷牙一次(p<0.05)和睡前刷牙(p<0.05)的人数有所增加;口腔健康状况改善(口臭、疼痛和因紧急牙科治疗而缺勤的情况减少);更全面的健康知识。其他积极的观察结果包括学校健康文化的改变;孩子们分享新的健康知识,并倡导所学的健康行为;以及在最初的口腔健康部分取得成功后,健康促进活动演变为解决其他社区确定的问题。大学教师和学生从参与方案实施和社区教育机会中学习。使用这种口腔健康模式的学校健康促进活动很容易被接受、实施、维持和评估;所有社区都拥有自主权,所有学校都继续开展他们的项目。通过 HP 学校解决口腔健康问题在非洲是新颖的,从中吸取的一些经验教训对撒哈拉以南非洲类似的健康促进计划具有潜在价值。