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O9-6 Shedding Light on men's health: Evaluating the impact and scalability of a community-based men's health promotion programme “Sheds for Life” in Irish Men's Sheds

BACKGROUND: Sheds for Life (SFL) is a ten-week health and wellbeing programme delivered in the community setting of Men's Sheds in Ireland that uses gender-sensitive approaches to engage typically hard-to-reach men (?Shedders') with health. SFL consists of a health check, core modules of p...

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Autores principales: McGrath, Aisling, Murphy, Niamh, Richardson, Noel, Byrne, Edel
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9435627/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/eurpub/ckac094.070
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author McGrath, Aisling
Murphy, Niamh
Richardson, Noel
Byrne, Edel
author_facet McGrath, Aisling
Murphy, Niamh
Richardson, Noel
Byrne, Edel
author_sort McGrath, Aisling
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Sheds for Life (SFL) is a ten-week health and wellbeing programme delivered in the community setting of Men's Sheds in Ireland that uses gender-sensitive approaches to engage typically hard-to-reach men (?Shedders') with health. SFL consists of a health check, core modules of physical activity (consisting of a walking programme or chair-based exercises for older adults), mental wellbeing, healthy eating and other elective wellbeing components. SFL is implemented across two phases with four regions per phase. The purpose of the research is to evaluate SFL using an implementation science approach to assess programme impact and implementation effectiveness with a view to enhancing its sustainability and scalability while also informing gender-sensitive strategies that engage hard-to-reach men with health and wellbeing. METHODS: This study is a hybrid typology ?effectiveness-implementation? design. A community-based participatory research, and mixed methods approach has been adopted to measure the effects of the SFL intervention on Shedders across implementation phases and identify and monitor implementation barriers and facilitators that can inform future sustainability and scale-up of SFL. Central to effective implementation of SFL is a partnership approach between the Irish Men's Sheds Association (IMSA) and other health-related partner organisations (POs). This research engages key stakeholders (at individual (Shedder), provider (POs) and organisational (IMSA) levels) and prioritises implementation outcomes. Purposive sampling is used to recruit a diverse sample of participants (Shedders n = 420 and SFL providers n = 20). RESULTS: Findings from phase 1 will inform phase 2 implementation. Preliminary physical activity outcome results from phase one across four regions (baseline to ten weeks) suggest days active per week increased from 3.07 to 4.32 days (p =.00) days walking increased from 4.29 to 5.28 days (p=.00) minutes walking per day increased from 33.31 to 38.15 (p=.005) CONCLUSIONS: Preliminary findings highlight the potential of the SFL initiative to address the increasing calls for gender-specific health promotion programmes that target lifestyle and health behaviour change in men. Shed settings are unique and effective in attracting men from more marginalised male subpopulations, reaching men who would typically not engage with health services. This study is funded by the Irish Research Council (ID: EBPPG/2018/256)
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spelling pubmed-94356272022-09-02 O9-6 Shedding Light on men's health: Evaluating the impact and scalability of a community-based men's health promotion programme “Sheds for Life” in Irish Men's Sheds McGrath, Aisling Murphy, Niamh Richardson, Noel Byrne, Edel Eur J Public Health Parallel Sessions BACKGROUND: Sheds for Life (SFL) is a ten-week health and wellbeing programme delivered in the community setting of Men's Sheds in Ireland that uses gender-sensitive approaches to engage typically hard-to-reach men (?Shedders') with health. SFL consists of a health check, core modules of physical activity (consisting of a walking programme or chair-based exercises for older adults), mental wellbeing, healthy eating and other elective wellbeing components. SFL is implemented across two phases with four regions per phase. The purpose of the research is to evaluate SFL using an implementation science approach to assess programme impact and implementation effectiveness with a view to enhancing its sustainability and scalability while also informing gender-sensitive strategies that engage hard-to-reach men with health and wellbeing. METHODS: This study is a hybrid typology ?effectiveness-implementation? design. A community-based participatory research, and mixed methods approach has been adopted to measure the effects of the SFL intervention on Shedders across implementation phases and identify and monitor implementation barriers and facilitators that can inform future sustainability and scale-up of SFL. Central to effective implementation of SFL is a partnership approach between the Irish Men's Sheds Association (IMSA) and other health-related partner organisations (POs). This research engages key stakeholders (at individual (Shedder), provider (POs) and organisational (IMSA) levels) and prioritises implementation outcomes. Purposive sampling is used to recruit a diverse sample of participants (Shedders n = 420 and SFL providers n = 20). RESULTS: Findings from phase 1 will inform phase 2 implementation. Preliminary physical activity outcome results from phase one across four regions (baseline to ten weeks) suggest days active per week increased from 3.07 to 4.32 days (p =.00) days walking increased from 4.29 to 5.28 days (p=.00) minutes walking per day increased from 33.31 to 38.15 (p=.005) CONCLUSIONS: Preliminary findings highlight the potential of the SFL initiative to address the increasing calls for gender-specific health promotion programmes that target lifestyle and health behaviour change in men. Shed settings are unique and effective in attracting men from more marginalised male subpopulations, reaching men who would typically not engage with health services. This study is funded by the Irish Research Council (ID: EBPPG/2018/256) Oxford University Press 2022-08-29 /pmc/articles/PMC9435627/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/eurpub/ckac094.070 Text en © The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the European Public Health Association. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Parallel Sessions
McGrath, Aisling
Murphy, Niamh
Richardson, Noel
Byrne, Edel
O9-6 Shedding Light on men's health: Evaluating the impact and scalability of a community-based men's health promotion programme “Sheds for Life” in Irish Men's Sheds
title O9-6 Shedding Light on men's health: Evaluating the impact and scalability of a community-based men's health promotion programme “Sheds for Life” in Irish Men's Sheds
title_full O9-6 Shedding Light on men's health: Evaluating the impact and scalability of a community-based men's health promotion programme “Sheds for Life” in Irish Men's Sheds
title_fullStr O9-6 Shedding Light on men's health: Evaluating the impact and scalability of a community-based men's health promotion programme “Sheds for Life” in Irish Men's Sheds
title_full_unstemmed O9-6 Shedding Light on men's health: Evaluating the impact and scalability of a community-based men's health promotion programme “Sheds for Life” in Irish Men's Sheds
title_short O9-6 Shedding Light on men's health: Evaluating the impact and scalability of a community-based men's health promotion programme “Sheds for Life” in Irish Men's Sheds
title_sort o9-6 shedding light on men's health: evaluating the impact and scalability of a community-based men's health promotion programme “sheds for life” in irish men's sheds
topic Parallel Sessions
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9435627/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/eurpub/ckac094.070
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