Centre of Methods and Policy Application in the Social Sciences, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand.
Department of Social Science, University College London Institute of Education, London, United Kingdom.
J Adolesc Health. 2016 Apr;58(4):382-396. doi: 10.1016/j.jadohealth.2015.12.017.
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.
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.
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.
There is good evidence that various whole-school health interventions are effective in preventing teenage pregnancy, smoking, and bullying.
在学校课堂中进行健康教育,可以有效促进性健康,预防暴力和药物滥用,但效果参差不齐且往往是短期的。由于学校越来越注重学业成绩指标,课堂教育也具有挑战性。其他可能的学校方法包括制定健康的学校政策、改善学校对欺凌行为的应对方式以及与家长联系等,这些方法不仅限于健康教育,还涉及更广泛的健康决定因素。现有的系统评价包括这些干预措施,但通常与传统的健康教育一起进行。有必要进行系统的综述评价,以评估和综合现有评价中的证据,从而全面了解替代学校方法的潜力。
我们搜索了 12 个数据库,以确定 1980 年后发表的综述。由两名研究人员对数据进行了审查。使用修改后的评估系统综述方法学质量清单来评估质量,并以叙述性的方式综合结果。
我们筛选了 7544 篇独特的参考文献,纳入了 22 篇综述。我们的综合分析表明,多组分的学校干预措施,例如包括学校政策的改变、家长参与以及与当地社区合作,对于促进性健康和预防欺凌和吸烟是有效的。但对于减少饮酒和药物使用,证据较少。为了让女孩留在学校而提供经济激励可以减少青少年怀孕的情况。学校诊所可以促进戒烟。单独来看,性健康诊所、禁烟政策以及针对高危学生的各种方法的效果证据不足。
有充分的证据表明,各种全校范围的健康干预措施在预防青少年怀孕、吸烟和欺凌方面是有效的。