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New South Wales Public Health Bulletin New South Wales Public Health Bulletin Society
Supporting public health practice in New South Wales
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Evaluation of three population health capacity building projects delivered by videoconferencing in NSW

Jacq Hackett A , D. Lynne Madden B D , Kerri A. Viney B and Carlie-Jane Naylor C
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Jacq Hackett Consulting

B Public Health Training and Development Branch, NSW Department of Health

C NSW Public Health Officer Training Program, NSW Department of Health

D Corresponding author. Email: lmadd@doh.health.nsw.gov.au

NSW Public Health Bulletin 20(12) 182-186 https://doi.org/10.1071/NB09037
Published: 4 February 2010

Abstract

Three population health projects in falls prevention, smoking cessation and refugee health secured funding through the NSW Telehealth Initiative. All were capacity building projects delivered through live videoconferencing sessions between April and August 2007. Videoconferencing as a mode of delivery was evaluated from the perspective of those who delivered the projects. Method: Qualitative semi-structured interviews with 12 key informants explored for each project: the organisation and delivery of the education sessions; the utility of videoconferencing for delivering training programs; and the perceived potential to apply videoconferencing to other functions. Results: The projects were all delivered successfully through live videoconferencing. The main benefits observed were: the ability to deliver training to large numbers of people across multiple locations within a relatively short time and for reasonable costs; and the ability to improve access to high quality professional development for rural and remote workers. Technical difficulties were minor. The support required for these kinds of e-learning projects to succeed were identified. Conclusion: The evaluation confirmed the value of videoconferencing as a vehicle through which equity of access to learning opportunities for population health workers across NSW can be achieved.


Acknowledgments

We would like to thank the NSW Telehealth Initiative Strategy for the financial support for the delivery of these projects. We would also like to thank the members of the Telehealth Evaluation Advisory Committee for their assistance with the evaluation: Lou-Anne Blunden, Lorraine Lovett, Elayne Mitchell, Mitchell Smith, Kim Stewart and Sarah Thackway.


References


[1] Naylor C-J,  Madden DL. Communication technology supporting the public health workforce in NSW, Glossary. NSW Public Health Bull 2009; 20(S2): 3.
(Cited 9 December 2009.)

[3] Mitchell EN,  Hawkshaw BN,  Naylor CJ,  Soewido D,  Sanders JM. Enabling the NSW Health workforce to provide evidence-based smoking-cessation advice through competency-based training delivered via video conferencing. N S W Public Health Bull 2008; 19(3–4): 56–9.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | PubMed | (Cited 23 November 2009.)

[8] NSW Department of Health Population Health Division. The health of the people of New South Wales – Report of the Chief Health Officer. Available from: www.health.nsw.gov.au/publichealth/chorep/ (Cited 23 November 2009.)

[9] Birden H , Page S . Teaching by videoconference: a commentary on best practice for rural education in health professions. Rural Remote Health 2005; 5(2). Available from: http://www.rrh.org.au (Cited 23 November 2009.) Pubmed Abstract

[10] Simpson D , Madden DL , Naylor CJ . Bug Breakfast Delivery Manual. North Sydney: NSW Department of Health; 2007.