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Development, feasibility, acceptability and potential effectiveness of a healthy lifestyle programme delivered in churches in urban and rural South Africa

Rising levels of obesity in South Africa require innovation in community-level lifestyle change programmes. Our aim was to co-develop Impilo neZenkolo (‘Health through Faith’), a healthy lifestyle programme for low-income, black South Africans delivered through churches, and evaluate its feasibility...

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Autores principales: Draper, Catherine Elizabeth, Tomaz, Simone Annabella, Zihindula, Ganzamungu, Bunn, Christopher, Gray, Cindy M., Hunt, Kate, Micklesfield, Lisa Kim, Wyke, Sally
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6668772/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31365557
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0219787
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author Draper, Catherine Elizabeth
Tomaz, Simone Annabella
Zihindula, Ganzamungu
Bunn, Christopher
Gray, Cindy M.
Hunt, Kate
Micklesfield, Lisa Kim
Wyke, Sally
author_facet Draper, Catherine Elizabeth
Tomaz, Simone Annabella
Zihindula, Ganzamungu
Bunn, Christopher
Gray, Cindy M.
Hunt, Kate
Micklesfield, Lisa Kim
Wyke, Sally
author_sort Draper, Catherine Elizabeth
collection PubMed
description Rising levels of obesity in South Africa require innovation in community-level lifestyle change programmes. Our aim was to co-develop Impilo neZenkolo (‘Health through Faith’), a healthy lifestyle programme for low-income, black South Africans delivered through churches, and evaluate its feasibility, acceptability and potential effectiveness. In the first phase we developed programme materials with church members. In the second phase we trained lay leaders to deliver the programme and assessed feasibility, acceptability (observation, focus groups and interviews) and potential effectiveness (pre and post measurement of weight, hip and waist circumferences, blood pressure, self-reported physical activity, dietary habits, health status, self-esteem, psychological distress). The study was conducted in four churches in urban and rural South Africa. The development workshops led to increased focus on positive benefits of participation, widening inclusion criteria to all adults and greater emphasis on Christian ethos. Challenges to feasibility included: recruitment of churches; scheduling of programme sessions (leading to one church not delivering the programme); attendance at the programme (63% attended more than half of the 12 weekly sessions); and poor programme fidelity (in particular in teaching behaviour change techniques). Aspects of the programme were acceptable, particularly the way in which the programme was aligned with a Christian ethos. There was some indication that amongst the 42/68 (62%) for whom we were obtained pre- and post-programme measurements the programme has potential to support weight loss. We conclude that a healthy lifestyle programme for low-income, black South Africans, delivered through churches, may be viable with extensive re-development of delivery strategies. These include finding external funding for the programme, endorsement from national level denominational organisations and the professionalization of programme leadership, including paid rather than volunteer leaders to ensure sufficient time can be spent in training.
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spelling pubmed-66687722019-08-06 Development, feasibility, acceptability and potential effectiveness of a healthy lifestyle programme delivered in churches in urban and rural South Africa Draper, Catherine Elizabeth Tomaz, Simone Annabella Zihindula, Ganzamungu Bunn, Christopher Gray, Cindy M. Hunt, Kate Micklesfield, Lisa Kim Wyke, Sally PLoS One Research Article Rising levels of obesity in South Africa require innovation in community-level lifestyle change programmes. Our aim was to co-develop Impilo neZenkolo (‘Health through Faith’), a healthy lifestyle programme for low-income, black South Africans delivered through churches, and evaluate its feasibility, acceptability and potential effectiveness. In the first phase we developed programme materials with church members. In the second phase we trained lay leaders to deliver the programme and assessed feasibility, acceptability (observation, focus groups and interviews) and potential effectiveness (pre and post measurement of weight, hip and waist circumferences, blood pressure, self-reported physical activity, dietary habits, health status, self-esteem, psychological distress). The study was conducted in four churches in urban and rural South Africa. The development workshops led to increased focus on positive benefits of participation, widening inclusion criteria to all adults and greater emphasis on Christian ethos. Challenges to feasibility included: recruitment of churches; scheduling of programme sessions (leading to one church not delivering the programme); attendance at the programme (63% attended more than half of the 12 weekly sessions); and poor programme fidelity (in particular in teaching behaviour change techniques). Aspects of the programme were acceptable, particularly the way in which the programme was aligned with a Christian ethos. There was some indication that amongst the 42/68 (62%) for whom we were obtained pre- and post-programme measurements the programme has potential to support weight loss. We conclude that a healthy lifestyle programme for low-income, black South Africans, delivered through churches, may be viable with extensive re-development of delivery strategies. These include finding external funding for the programme, endorsement from national level denominational organisations and the professionalization of programme leadership, including paid rather than volunteer leaders to ensure sufficient time can be spent in training. Public Library of Science 2019-07-31 /pmc/articles/PMC6668772/ /pubmed/31365557 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0219787 Text en © 2019 Draper et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Draper, Catherine Elizabeth
Tomaz, Simone Annabella
Zihindula, Ganzamungu
Bunn, Christopher
Gray, Cindy M.
Hunt, Kate
Micklesfield, Lisa Kim
Wyke, Sally
Development, feasibility, acceptability and potential effectiveness of a healthy lifestyle programme delivered in churches in urban and rural South Africa
title Development, feasibility, acceptability and potential effectiveness of a healthy lifestyle programme delivered in churches in urban and rural South Africa
title_full Development, feasibility, acceptability and potential effectiveness of a healthy lifestyle programme delivered in churches in urban and rural South Africa
title_fullStr Development, feasibility, acceptability and potential effectiveness of a healthy lifestyle programme delivered in churches in urban and rural South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Development, feasibility, acceptability and potential effectiveness of a healthy lifestyle programme delivered in churches in urban and rural South Africa
title_short Development, feasibility, acceptability and potential effectiveness of a healthy lifestyle programme delivered in churches in urban and rural South Africa
title_sort development, feasibility, acceptability and potential effectiveness of a healthy lifestyle programme delivered in churches in urban and rural south africa
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6668772/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31365557
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0219787
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