The COMPASS study: a longitudinal hierarchical research platform for evaluating natural experiments related to changes in school-level programs, policies and built environment resources

Few researchers have the data required to adequately understand how the school environment impacts youth health behaviour development over time. COMPASS is a prospective cohort study designed to annually collect hierarchical longitudinal data from a sample of 90 secondary schools and the 50,000+ gra...

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Veröffentlicht in:BMC public health 2014-04, Vol.14 (1), p.331-331, Article 331
Hauptverfasser: Leatherdale, Scott T, Brown, K Stephen, Carson, Valerie, Childs, Ruth A, Dubin, Joel A, Elliott, Susan J, Faulkner, Guy, Hammond, David, Manske, Steve, Sabiston, Catherine M, Laxer, Rachel E, Bredin, Chad, Thompson-Haile, Audra
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Few researchers have the data required to adequately understand how the school environment impacts youth health behaviour development over time. COMPASS is a prospective cohort study designed to annually collect hierarchical longitudinal data from a sample of 90 secondary schools and the 50,000+ grade 9 to 12 students attending those schools. COMPASS uses a rigorous quasi-experimental design to evaluate how changes in school programs, policies, and/or built environment (BE) characteristics are related to changes in multiple youth health behaviours and outcomes over time. These data will allow for the quasi-experimental evaluation of natural experiments that will occur within schools over the course of COMPASS, providing a means for generating "practice based evidence" in school-based prevention programming. COMPASS is the first study with the infrastructure to robustly evaluate the impact that changes in multiple school-level programs, policies, and BE characteristics within or surrounding a school might have on multiple youth health behaviours or outcomes over time. COMPASS will provide valuable new insight for planning, tailoring and targeting of school-based prevention initiatives where they are most likely to have impact.
ISSN:1471-2458
1471-2458
DOI:10.1186/1471-2458-14-331