Perceptions of the acceptability and effectiveness of a localised lifestyle medicine initiative to improve mental health – the lift project

Publication Date

2024-04-29

Avondale Affiliates

Publisher

Taylor & Francis Online

Original

Rights

Peer Review Status

Review Status

Peer Reviewed

Field of Education

06 Health

Field of Research

42 HEALTH SCIENCES::4206 Public health

Degree

Department

Faculty

Supervisor

Awarding Institution

Degree

Department

Faculty

Supervisor

Awarding Institution

Abstract

Objective Evaluate survey respondents’ perceptions concerning the acceptability and effectiveness of a localised, community-based mental health program.

Method Avondale University and Lake Macquarie City Council partnered to implement an online, lifestyle-based program for all Council residents during a COVID-19 lockdown period. The University and Council promoted the program through established networks, resulting in 2390 registrations representing 4041 participants. Researchers invited registered users to respond to a post-program survey assessing their perceptions concerning program satisfaction, mental health benefits, and self-efficacy for managing mental health. Qualitative questions probed respondents’ likes and dislikes and were analysed thematically.

Results Response rates were low, 6% (138/2390) of registered participants completed the post-program survey. Of the 138 responses, 99% indicated they would recommend the program to others, and 94% believed they gained skills to manage their mental well-being into the future. Themes generated from the qualitative data indicated that respondents liked the video content and delivery style, community camaraderie, personal empowerment, and easy accessibility. Some respondents found online accessibility problematic, disliked the delivery style, and experienced technical difficulties.

Discussion The findings from a limited number of respondents indicate that a localised, community-based lifestyle program may offer a replicable model that is acceptable and effective in improving perceived mental health and self-efficacy in managing mental well-being. Survey respondents valued the practical content, community togetherness and emphasis on self-empowerment.

Description

© 2024 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. All rights reserved. This article is unavailable for download due to publisher restrictions. The final published version is available from the publisher: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/18387357.2024.2346231?scroll=top&needAccess=true#abstract

Research Statement

Keywords

Health promotion, mental health, community mental health services

Citation

Renfrew, M., Morton, D., Rankin, P., & and Maguire, L. (2024). Perceptions of the acceptability and effectiveness of a localised lifestyle medicine initiative to improve mental health – the lift project. Advances in Mental Health, 23(1), 52-69. https://doi.org/10.1080/18387357.2024.2346231

International Standard Serial Number

International Standard Book Number

Avondale University acknowledges our Sovereign God as Creator and Provider of all things. We respectfully acknowledge the Awabakal and Darramuragal people as the traditional custodians of the lands on which we live, work, study and worship across our Lake Macquarie and Sydney campuses. We pay our respects to Elders past, present and emerging, and extend that respect to all First Nations People.

Avondale University is a member of the worldwide Seventh-day Adventist system of universities and colleges.

CRICOS Provider No.: 02731D. RTO: 91191. TEQSA: PRV12015. ABN: 53 108 186 401.

© Avondale University Ltd 2025