Mixed-Methods Evaluation of the HealthyWEY E-Learning Toolkit for Promoting Healthy Weight in the Early Years
James E. Harrison, Julie Abayomi, Shaima Hassan, Lawrence Foweather, Clare Maxwell, Deborah McCann, Sarah Garbett, Maria Nugent, Daisy Bradbury, Hannah Timpson, Lorna Porcellato, Marian Judd, Anna Chisholm, Nabil Isaac, Beth Wolfenden, Amy Greenhalgh, Paula M. Watson

TL;DR
This study evaluated an e-learning toolkit to help early years professionals promote healthy weight in young children, finding it effective in reducing barriers and increasing motivation.
Contribution
The study introduces and evaluates the HealthyWEY e-learning toolkit, showing its impact on practitioners' motivation and perceived barriers to promoting healthy weight.
Findings
Participants perceived fewer barriers to pre-school child weight management after using HealthyWEY.
The e-learning increased participants' autonomy, competence, and relatedness in promoting healthy weight.
HealthyWEY was seen as relevant to roles and aligned with local child weight strategies.
Abstract
Despite being well-positioned to promote healthy lifestyles in young children, early years practitioners often face barriers to supporting child weight management. This mixed-methods study aimed to assess the preliminary effectiveness and acceptability of an e-learning toolkit (HealthyWEY) designed to upskill and support multi-agency professionals to promote healthy weight in early childhood. A total of 54 health visitors/community nursery nurses, 38 children’s centre staff and 17 other health professionals engaged with the HealthyWEY e-learning, which drew on self-determination theory and consisted of nine modules that were completed over 7–10 weeks. Non-parametric statistical analysis using Wilcoxon’s signed-rank tests were used to explore participants’ practice-based knowledge, psychological needs satisfaction and motivations for prioritising pre-school child weight from pre- to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSchool Health and Nursing Education · Health Policy Implementation Science · Infant Development and Preterm Care
