Translation of District Sun Safe Policies to Schools
- Conditions
- Sun Safe SchoolsSun SafetyPrevention of Skin Cancer
- Interventions
- Behavioral: Attention ControlBehavioral: Translation of District Sun Safe Policies to Schools
- Registration Number
- NCT03243929
- Lead Sponsor
- Claremont Graduate University
- Brief Summary
The purpose of the Translation of District Sun Safe Policies to Schools study was to test whether schools need assistance to facilitate the implementation of school district board-approved sun safety policies by individual elementary schools. The intervention is expected to produce a change in practices at the school level and to improve the sun safety behavior of children attending the intervention schools compared to control schools. A group of 40 school districts in Southern California that adopted board policy 5141.7 for sun safety provided 118 schools that were randomized to a intervention condition or to an attention control condition. The primary outcome is change in school-level sun safety practices based on 10 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) categories for policy change (i.e., sunscreen use, UV protective clothing, hats, student education, teacher education, provision of shade, scheduling to avoid peak UV exposure, parent outreach, resource allocation for sun safety, and an accountability system). This primary outcome was assessed by a survey of the principal and one teacher at each school (N=118 principals and 113 teachers at pretest). Parents (N=1770 at pretest) of children attending the schools completed a self-report measure assessing the secondary outcomes of change in individual-level sun safety behavior of their elementary school aged children and number of communications received from the school regarding sun safety. Assessment of principals, teachers and parents occurred at pretest, just prior to randomization, and at a posttest 20-months after the pretest. One Parent Teacher Association (PTA) representative per school was contacted to assess PTA involvement in intervention activities related to sun safety.
The primary hypothesis was stated for the effectiveness of the intervention condition at increasing school-level sun safety practices consistent with the sun safety policies of the school districts and read, H1: At follow-up, a greater percentage of schools in the intervention condition will implement at least one component of the school district sun safety policy compared to schools randomized to the attention-control condition.
- Detailed Description
Not available
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 118
- School districts in California with school Board Policy 5141.7 available online, and with at least one elementary school.
- Schools Districts that do not have school Board Policy 5141.7 online, or do not have any elementary schools
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Attention Control Attention Control All participants in the attention control arm received three emails during the 20 month intervention period including (1) NASBE's Fit Healthy and Ready to Learn; A School Health Guide Part II: Policies to Promote Sun Safety and Prevent Skin Cancer, (2) CDC's Guidelines for Sun Safety to Prevent Skin Cancer, and (3) a link to the Surgeon General's 2014 Call to Action to Prevent Skin Cancer. This attention-control treatment will equalize schools on awareness of recommendations to implement school sun safety. Intervention Translation of District Sun Safe Policies to Schools All participants in the Translation of District Sun Safe Policies to Schools arm received 1) initial coaching meeting that guided principals through an evaluation of current sun safety practices, the selection of goals for the implementation of sun safety practices, and guidance on the use of intervention materials to support implementation of sun safety practices in the school, 2) follow-up communications from coaches including email, telephone, and virtual meetings, 3) access to media and online resources to support implementation of sun safety practices, 4) mini-grants to support changes in school sun safety practices.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Measure of implementation of sun safety practices and policy at schools 20 Months Change in implementation of sun safety policy after intervention, through survey administration
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Students sun protection behavior 20 Months Change in sun safety behaviors after intervention, through survey administration
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Claremont Graduate University
🇺🇸Claremont, California, United States