Centre de recherche du centre hospitalier de l'Université de Montréal (CRCHUM), 850 rue Saint-Denis, Montréal, QC H2X 0A9, Canada.
Department of Social and Preventive Medicine, Université de Montréal, 7101 avenue du Parc, Montréal, QC H3N 1X9, Canada.
Health Promot Int. 2022 Feb 17;37(1). doi: 10.1093/heapro/daab023.
Availability of health-promoting interventions (HPIs) may vary across schools serving students with different socioeconomic backgrounds. Our objectives were to describe social inequalities across elementary schools in: (i) level of importance that school principals attribute to 13 common health-related issues among students in their school; (ii) availability of HPIs within their school addressing eight health topics and (iii) (mis)alignment between perceived importance and HPI availability. Data were collected in telephone interviews with school principals in a convenience sample of 171 elementary schools (59% of 291 schools contacted). Schools were categorized as serving very advantaged, moderately advantaged or disadvantaged students. Principals reported how important 13 health issues were among students in their schools and provided data on HPI availability for 8 health issues, 4 of which required school action under government mandates. Higher proportions of principals in schools serving disadvantaged students (36% of all 171 schools) perceived most health issues as important. The mean number of HPIs in the past year was 12.0, 12.1 and 11.7 in schools serving very advantaged, moderately advantaged and disadvantaged students, respectively. Only availability of mental health HPIs differed by school deprivation (60, 43 and 30% in very, moderately and disadvantaged, respectively). Although most schools offered oral health HPIs, dental problems were not perceived as important. Smoking was perceived as not important and smoking-related HPIs were relatively rare (9%). Given rapid evolution in public health priorities, (mis)alignment between perceived importance of specific health issues and HPI availability in elementary schools warrants ongoing reflection.
在为具有不同社会经济背景的学生提供健康促进干预措施(HPIs)方面,不同学校之间可能存在差异。我们的目标是描述小学之间在以下方面的社会不平等现象:(i)学校校长对学生在学校中常见的 13 个健康相关问题的重视程度;(ii)学校内部针对 8 个健康主题提供的 HPIs;以及(iii)感知到的重要性和 HPI 供应之间的不匹配。在一项便利抽样研究中,通过电话采访了 171 所小学(占联系的 291 所学校的 59%)的校长,收集了数据。这些学校被分为服务于非常有利、中等有利或不利学生的学校。校长报告了学生在其学校中遇到的 13 个健康问题的重要性,并提供了 8 个健康问题的 HPI 供应数据,其中 4 个问题需要根据政府规定采取学校行动。在服务于不利学生的学校中,更多的校长(171 所学校中所有校长的 36%)认为大多数健康问题都很重要。在过去一年中,服务于非常有利、中等有利和不利学生的学校的 HPI 数量分别为 12.0、12.1 和 11.7。只有心理健康 HPI 的供应因学校贫困程度而异(分别为 60%、43%和 30%)。尽管大多数学校提供口腔健康 HPI,但口腔健康问题并没有被认为很重要。吸烟被认为不重要,与吸烟相关的 HPI 相对较少(9%)。鉴于公共卫生重点的快速演变,小学中特定健康问题的感知重要性与 HPI 供应之间的不匹配值得持续关注。