Assessment of Good Practices in Community-Based Interventions for Physical Activity Promotion: Development of a User-Friendly Tool
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Development of the Tool
- I.
- In the first round, the main goal was to reach a consensus on the best term and description used for each good practice characteristic, given that, in some cases, different names were used to define the same characteristic, and sometimes the same characteristic was defined differently.
- II.
- Then, with this new list of good practice characteristics, the expert panel was asked to rate each characteristic based on their relative importance on a scale of 1 to 10.
- III.
- In the third round, all the ratings were grouped, and a discussion was conducted to reach a consensus among the expert panel on the rating for each one of the good practice characteristics listed previously by recoding the previous answers ranging from 1 to 10. Then, a final rating on the relative importance for each characteristic was established, where each characteristic was rated with 1 (i.e., somewhat important), 2 (i.e., highly important), or 3 (i.e., mandatory). This rating was also converted into a percentage score, from 0 to 100%, accordingly.
- IV.
- Finally, in the fourth round of revision, small edits were performed, and a final tool, with a list of the good practice characteristics and respective ratings, was approved.
2.2. Pilot Application and Preliminary Validation of the Tool
3. Results
3.1. Development of the Tool
- I.
- In the first round of revision by the expert panel, the initial list of 86 characteristics was reduced to 40, after the elimination of duplicates, and distributed by the three main domains (16 main intervention characteristics, 16 monitoring and evaluation characteristics, and 8 implementation strategies).
- II.
- In the second round of the Delphi process, the expert panel rated each characteristic on a scale from 1 to 10 based on their relative importance. At this point consensus was reached for 11 out of the 40 characteristics regarding their relative importance; all other characteristics were discussed among the expert panel until a consensus was reached.
- III.
- Following this debate, in the third round of revision, it was considered that a rating scale ranging from 1 to 3 was more appropriate and easier to apply. Therefore, each characteristic was rated, based on their importance, with 1 (i.e., somewhat important), 2 (i.e., highly important), or 3 (i.e., mandatory). Seven characteristics were rated with 1, eight with 2, and the remaining with 3. This rating was also converted into a percentage score. From this process, the list created now included a specific rating, as well as a percentage ratio, for each good practice characteristic.
- IV.
- Finally, in the fourth round, small edits were made to the list, six characteristics were further grouped, and the final tool consisted of 34 good practice characteristics.
3.2. Pilot Application and Preliminary Validation of the Tool
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Good Practice Characteristics Appraisal Tool | Percentage (Rate) | ||
---|---|---|---|
Main Intervention Characteristics (55.5%) | |||
Evidence/theory used in the development of the intervention is described | 6.5% (3) | ||
Target population is defined and justified (regarding risk and susceptibility factors) | 6.5% (3) | ||
Equity in access to intervention and throughout participation is ensured | 6.5% (3) | ||
Target behavior to change or to gain through participation is defined | 6.5% (3) | ||
Intervention has a comprehensive approach to health promotion, regarding individual, social and environmental factors | 5% (2) | ||
Detailed description of the intervention | Place, number, duration, and frequency of contacts with participants specified, as well as the total duration of the intervention | 1.69% (3) | |
Methods of content delivery are specified | 1.69% (3) | ||
Themes/contents of each session are defined and justified | 1.69% (3) | ||
Manual/protocol to support implementation exists | 1.43% (2) | ||
Behavioral change techniques are used, specified, and justified | 5% (2) | ||
Informed consent form, respecting ethical principles, exists | 6.5% (3) | ||
Qualifications and competences of the practitioners involved are specified | 6.5% (3) | ||
Monitoring and Evaluation (24.5%) | |||
Description of total financial costs of the intervention | Total financial costs of the intervention are specified, including cost per participant | 3% (2) | |
Costs in relation to obtained general health benefits are specified (cost-effectiveness analyses) | 2% (1) | ||
Description of evaluation framework | Process indicators/measures are specified | 1.43% (3) | |
Outcome indicators/measures are specified | 1.43% (3) | ||
Methods used to measure outcomes are specified and justified | 1.43% (3) | ||
All evaluation moments are specified | 1.43% (3) | ||
Follow-up and/or sustained evaluation of participants is specified | 0.78% (1) | ||
Presentation of results and outcomes | Report of process evaluation results | Recruitment strategies and their reach are reported | 1.43% (2) |
Participation and dropout rates throughout the intervention are reported | 2.08% (3) | ||
Participant’s satisfaction rates are reported | 1.43% (2) | ||
Unintended outcomes are monitored and reported | 0.78% (1) | ||
Consistency/fidelity or changes made to the protocol are monitored | 0.78% (1) | ||
Report of outcome evaluation results | Effect sizes are estimated and reported | 1.3% (1) | |
Evaluation results according to the stated goals and objectives are reported | 2.9% (3) | ||
Negative consequences and outcomes are monitored and reported | 2.3% (2) | ||
Implementation Strategies (20%) | |||
Detailed description of the implementation strategies | Practitioners received training in aspects of implementation | 1.43% (3) | |
Human and material resources necessary for the implementation are specified | 1.43% (3) | ||
Existing resources are used or integrated | 1.43% (3) | ||
Organizational structures are clearly defined and described (e.g., work and communication flow, responsibilities) | 0.78% (1) | ||
Multidisciplinary and intersectoral partnerships for the development and implementation of the interventions are established | 6.5% (3) | ||
A long-term strategy for implementation is defined | 5% (2) | ||
Transferability of the intervention to other populations or contexts is assessed | 2% (1) |
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Franco, S.; Godinho, C.; Silva, C.S.; Avelar-Rosa, B.; Santos, R.; Mendes, R.; Silva, M.N. Assessment of Good Practices in Community-Based Interventions for Physical Activity Promotion: Development of a User-Friendly Tool. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 4734. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18094734
Franco S, Godinho C, Silva CS, Avelar-Rosa B, Santos R, Mendes R, Silva MN. Assessment of Good Practices in Community-Based Interventions for Physical Activity Promotion: Development of a User-Friendly Tool. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(9):4734. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18094734
Chicago/Turabian StyleFranco, Sofia, Cristina Godinho, Catarina Santos Silva, Bruno Avelar-Rosa, Rute Santos, Romeu Mendes, and Marlene Nunes Silva. 2021. "Assessment of Good Practices in Community-Based Interventions for Physical Activity Promotion: Development of a User-Friendly Tool" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 9: 4734. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18094734
APA StyleFranco, S., Godinho, C., Silva, C. S., Avelar-Rosa, B., Santos, R., Mendes, R., & Silva, M. N. (2021). Assessment of Good Practices in Community-Based Interventions for Physical Activity Promotion: Development of a User-Friendly Tool. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(9), 4734. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18094734