# Balancing Fidelity and Adaptation: Action‐Oriented Research Towards Implementing a Nutrition Education Program Among Adolescents

**Authors:** Marion D. Driessen‐Willems, Nina H. M. Bartelink, Kathelijne M. H. H. Bessems, Stef K. Kremers, Patricia van Assema

PMC · DOI: 10.1111/josh.70009 · 2025-05-04

## TL;DR

This study explores how to balance sticking to a nutrition education program and adapting it to fit school contexts, using continuous feedback and adjustments.

## Contribution

The study introduces action-oriented research with micro-process cycles to improve contextual fit in implementing health promotion programs.

## Key findings

- Small mismatches between the program and school context significantly affect implementation.
- Teacher technological savviness and student maturity are key contextual factors influencing program success.
- Action-oriented research with continuous adaptation improves program sustainability.

## Abstract

Implementation of school‐based health promotion programs requires contextual fit. To strengthen the nutrition education program “Krachtvoer” (ENG: “Power Food”) and learn general lessons about contextual fit, this study examined how the program, the context, and program‐context interactions affected teachers' balancing between implementation fidelity and adaptation.

As part of a co‐creation process with continuous micro‐process cycles of implementing, measuring, evaluating, and adapting the program, action‐oriented research was conducted during the pilot implementation of program modules by 25 teachers in 32 classes with 635 students. Using observations and interviews, data were collected about indicators of the implementation process, technology, layout, and content aspects of the program, inner and broader school contextual factors including teacher, student, and school characteristics, and interactions between program‐ and context‐related aspects that influence the implementation process.

Even small mismatches between the program and the context affected the implementation process. Differences in the technological savviness of teachers and students, “adaptive management” skills to respond to changing circumstances of teachers, and the maturity and attention span of students were among the many contextual differences in and between schools.

Sustainability of health promotion programs fitting the context requires continuous and co‐creating efforts from all stakeholders.

Action‐oriented research with micro‐process cycles proved appropriate for strengthening the program. However, further research is needed on capacity building among program implementers in balancing fidelity and adaptation.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** HP (OMIM:603663), eating disorders (MESH:D001068), illness (MESH:D002908)
- **Species:** Hepacivirus P (species) [taxon 2202225], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

1 figure with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12088929/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12088929