The Prevention of Nicotine use in the State of Arkansas that has Geographic Tobacco use Disparities: the Perceived Prevention Needs and Realities of School Professionals.

IF 3.9 3区 医学 Q1 HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES
Ashley H Clawson, Page D Dobbs, Kara Lasater, Victor Kwaku Akakpo, Victoria N Mugambi, Haley B Gilliam
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Abstract

The current study used a convergent mixed-methods design and identified Arkansas school professionals' perceptions about (1) their schools' tobacco use prevention needs and (2) the implementation of tobacco prevention programming at their schools. Differences in perceptions based on school-related factors and personal tobacco use history were examined. Surveys were collected from teachers, administrators, and school staff from K-12 schools in Arkansas (QUANT; N = 325) and in-depth interviews were conducted with a separate sample of school administrators (QUAL; N = 20). Logistic regressions identified the associations between dependent variables, school-related factors (school type, school position, years of education work experience, and school rurality), and school professionals' tobacco use histories. The tobacco prevention components perceived as most important were parent education, school tobacco-free policies, and up-to-date teacher training. Yet, parent education and up-to-date teacher training were perceived as being poorly integrated into schools. Quantitative and qualitative findings emphasized the importance of integrating parents into tobacco prevention. There were differences in school professionals' perceptions about important tobacco prevention components based on school level, personal tobacco use history, and work experience. There were also differences in perceptions about how well tobacco prevention was integrated into schools between teachers vs. administrators and related to school rurality, school level, and work experience. School professionals in Arkansas, a state with tobacco disparities, identified that: (1) student tobacco use is a top health priority; (2) key strategies include parent education, tobacco-free policies, and teacher training; and (3) barriers exist, particularly in implementing parent education and teacher training.

预防尼古丁使用在阿肯色州的地理烟草使用差异:感知的预防需求和学校专业人员的现实。
目前的研究使用了融合混合方法设计,并确定了阿肯色州学校专业人员对(1)他们学校预防烟草使用需求和(2)他们学校实施烟草预防规划的看法。调查了基于学校相关因素和个人吸烟史的认知差异。调查收集了来自阿肯色州K-12学校的教师、管理人员和学校工作人员(QUANT;N = 325),并与学校管理人员的单独样本进行深度访谈(QUAL;n = 20)。Logistic回归确定了因变量、学校相关因素(学校类型、学校位置、教育工作年限和学校乡村性)和学校专业人员烟草使用史之间的关联。被认为最重要的预防烟草组成部分是家长教育、学校无烟政策和最新的教师培训。然而,家长教育和最新的教师培训被认为没有很好地融入学校。定量和定性调查结果强调了将父母纳入烟草预防的重要性。学校专业人员对重要烟草预防成分的认知存在基于学校水平、个人烟草使用史和工作经验的差异。教师与行政人员对预防吸烟融入学校的程度的看法也存在差异,并与学校的乡村性、学校水平和工作经验有关。阿肯色州是一个存在烟草差异的州,该州的学校专业人员发现:(1)学生吸烟是最重要的健康问题;(2)主要策略包括家长教育、无烟政策和教师培训;(3)存在障碍,特别是在实施家长教育和教师培训方面。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
10.80
自引率
1.70%
发文量
113
期刊介绍: The Journal of Community Health is a peer-reviewed publication that offers original articles on research, teaching, and the practice of community health and public health. Coverage includes public health, epidemiology, preventive medicine, health promotion, disease prevention, environmental and occupational health, health policy and management, and health disparities. The Journal does not publish articles on clinical medicine. Serving as a forum for the exchange of ideas, the Journal features articles on research that serve the educational needs of public and community health personnel.
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