TY - JOUR
T1 - Results of the TeachWell worksite wellness program
AU - Resnicow, Ken
AU - Davis, Marsha
AU - Smith, Matt
AU - Baranowski, Tom
AU - Lin, Lillian S.
AU - Baranowski, Janice
AU - Doyle, Colleen
AU - Wang, Dongqing Terry
PY - 1998/2
Y1 - 1998/2
N2 - Objectives. This study examined whether providing a school-based teacher wellness program enhances the impact of a health curriculum on student outcomes and improves cognitive, behavioral, and physiological outcomes among participating teachers. Methods. Thirty-two elementary schools were randomly assigned to experimental or comparison conditions. Comparison group schools received the Gimme-5 program, a curriculum designed to increase fourth and fifth graders' consumption of fruits and vegetables. Experimental schools received Gimme-5 and the teacher wellness program, which included 54 workshops over 2 years, along with several schoolwide health activities. Physiological, behavioral, and cognitive outcomes were assessed in teachers and students. Results. There was no evidence that the intervention favorably modified any student or teacher end points; nor did intervention teachers deliver the Gimme-5 program with greater fidelity than comparison teachers. Conclusion. Confidence in the null results is bolstered by the randomized design, baseline sample equivalence, appropriate mixed-model analyses, and lack of selective or differential attrition. Insufficient participation in the wellness program appears a likely explanation for the lack of teacher and student effects. Factors specific to the school setting and the intervention may have diminished participation and, thus, intervention effects.
AB - Objectives. This study examined whether providing a school-based teacher wellness program enhances the impact of a health curriculum on student outcomes and improves cognitive, behavioral, and physiological outcomes among participating teachers. Methods. Thirty-two elementary schools were randomly assigned to experimental or comparison conditions. Comparison group schools received the Gimme-5 program, a curriculum designed to increase fourth and fifth graders' consumption of fruits and vegetables. Experimental schools received Gimme-5 and the teacher wellness program, which included 54 workshops over 2 years, along with several schoolwide health activities. Physiological, behavioral, and cognitive outcomes were assessed in teachers and students. Results. There was no evidence that the intervention favorably modified any student or teacher end points; nor did intervention teachers deliver the Gimme-5 program with greater fidelity than comparison teachers. Conclusion. Confidence in the null results is bolstered by the randomized design, baseline sample equivalence, appropriate mixed-model analyses, and lack of selective or differential attrition. Insufficient participation in the wellness program appears a likely explanation for the lack of teacher and student effects. Factors specific to the school setting and the intervention may have diminished participation and, thus, intervention effects.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/0031940877
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/0031940877#tab=citedBy
U2 - 10.2105/AJPH.88.2.250
DO - 10.2105/AJPH.88.2.250
M3 - Article
C2 - 9491016
AN - SCOPUS:0031940877
SN - 0090-0036
VL - 88
SP - 250
EP - 257
JO - American journal of public health
JF - American journal of public health
IS - 2
ER -