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Barriers and facilitators to delivering injury prevention interventions in English children’s centres

McDaid, Lisa A.; Goodenough, Trudy; Kay, Bryony; Deave, Toity; Towner, Elizabeth; Stewart, Jane; Ablewhite, Joanne; Hawkins, Adrian; McDaid, Lisa; Pitchforth, Emma; Beckett, Kate; Kendrick, Denise

Authors

Lisa A. McDaid

Trudy Goodenough Trudy.Goodenough@uwe.ac.uk
Casual Research Fellow - Academic Grade G

Bryony Kay

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Toity Deave Toity.Deave@uwe.ac.uk
Associate Professor in Child & Family Health

Elizabeth Towner

Jane Stewart

Joanne Ablewhite

Adrian Hawkins

Lisa McDaid

Emma Pitchforth

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Kate Beckett Kate2.Beckett@uwe.ac.uk
Occasional Associate Lecturer - Allied Health Professions

Denise Kendrick



Abstract

© 2015 Institute of Health Promotion and Education. The aim of this study is to understand barriers and facilitators to the delivery of injury prevention programmes in English children’s centres (CCs). Unintentional injury is a major cause of disability and death in children aged 1–4 years; those living in poverty are at greatest risk. CCs are pivotal in English public health strategies to improve outcomes and reduce inequalities for disadvantaged children through health promotion and family support. This study is part of the National Institute for Health Research funded ‘Keeping Children Safe at home’ programme, which aims to develop a better understanding of how to prevent unintentional injuries in pre-school children. Thirty-three interviews with CC staff from 16 CCs across four study sites, Nottingham, Norwich, Newcastle and Bristol, explored practitioners’ experience of factors that impact on their implementation of health promotion and injury prevention interventions. Using Framework Analysis, managed by NVivo, key facilitators and barriers were identified across all levels of CCs’ operation. Facilitators included knowledge of policies and strategies in injury prevention, partnership working and effective parent engagement. Barriers included paucity of national and local injury data, difficulties reaching disengaged families and funding constraints. The challenge is to learn from those who work in CCs the best ways to harness facilitators and to address barriers to child injury prevention activities, and to provide support, including practical advice, for further development of their essential work in injury prevention.

Citation

McDaid, L. A., Goodenough, T., Kay, B., Deave, T., Towner, E., Stewart, J., …Kendrick, D. (2016). Barriers and facilitators to delivering injury prevention interventions in English children’s centres. International Journal of Health Promotion and Education, 54(2), 60-71. https://doi.org/10.1080/14635240.2015.1065710

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date Mar 3, 2016
Deposit Date Sep 9, 2015
Journal International Journal of Health Promotion and Education
Print ISSN 1463-5240
Electronic ISSN 2164-9545
Publisher Taylor & Francis (Routledge)
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 54
Issue 2
Pages 60-71
DOI https://doi.org/10.1080/14635240.2015.1065710
Keywords barriers and facilitators, injury prevention, children's centres, parents, young children
Public URL https://uwe-repository.worktribe.com/output/908865
Publisher URL http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14635240.2015.1065710