Beginning With the End in Mind: Contextual Considerations for Scaling-Out a Community-Based Intervention

Introduction: A number of effective physical activity programs for older adults exist, but are not widely delivered within community settings, such as the Cooperative Extension System. The purpose of this paper was to determine if an evidence-based intervention (EBI) developed in one state Extension...

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Main Authors: Laura E. Balis, Thomas E. Strayer, NithyaPriya Ramalingam, Samantha M. Harden
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2018-12-01
Series:Frontiers in Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpubh.2018.00357/full
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spelling doaj-c95f6cb14667411f927256fb609d26d92020-11-24T21:54:39ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Public Health2296-25652018-12-01610.3389/fpubh.2018.00357421537Beginning With the End in Mind: Contextual Considerations for Scaling-Out a Community-Based InterventionLaura E. Balis0Laura E. Balis1Thomas E. Strayer2NithyaPriya Ramalingam3Samantha M. Harden4Department of Human Nutrition, Foods, and Exercise, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA, United StatesExtension, University of Wyoming, Lander, WY, United StatesTranslational Biology, Medicine, and Health, Department of Human Nutrition, Foods, and Exercise, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA, United StatesTranslational Biology, Medicine, and Health, Department of Human Nutrition, Foods, and Exercise, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA, United StatesDepartment of Human Nutrition, Foods, and Exercise, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA, United StatesIntroduction: A number of effective physical activity programs for older adults exist, but are not widely delivered within community settings, such as the Cooperative Extension System. The purpose of this paper was to determine if an evidence-based intervention (EBI) developed in one state Extension system could be scaled-out to a new state system.Methods and results: The RE-AIM (reach, effectiveness, adoption, implementation, maintenance) framework was used to guide an iterative evaluation of three translational stages. Stage 1: Before program adoption, Extension health educators were surveyed and interviewed to assess physical activity programming perceptions and factors that may influence their decision to attend training or deliver the program in practice. Results indicated that a virtual, scalable training protocol would be necessary and that training needed to include hands-on instruction and be catered to those who were less confident in physical activity program delivery. Stage 2: Training attendees were surveyed pre- and post-training on factors related to the adoption-decision making process and contacted post-training to assess program delivery status. Training did not influence perceptions of the program, intent to deliver, or confidence in delivering the program. Stage 3: During program implementation, the program was evaluated through the RE-AIM framework by surveying across three key stakeholder groups: (1) program participants, (2) potential delivery personnel, and (3) Extension administrators. Findings indicate that the program has the potential to reach a large and representative proportion of the target audience, especially in rural areas. However, adoption and implementation rates among Extension health educators and community partners were low and data collection for effectiveness, implementation, and maintenance was a challenge.Conclusion: Overall, the results indicate initial struggles to translating and evaluating the program in a large, rural state. Implications for practice include making system-level changes to increase physical activity program adoption rates among Extension health educators and improve data collection and program evaluation through this community-based organization. More work is needed to identify infrastructure support and capacity to scale-out EBIs.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpubh.2018.00357/fullRE-AIMphysical activitycooperative Extension systemimplementation sciencetranslation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Laura E. Balis
Laura E. Balis
Thomas E. Strayer
NithyaPriya Ramalingam
Samantha M. Harden
spellingShingle Laura E. Balis
Laura E. Balis
Thomas E. Strayer
NithyaPriya Ramalingam
Samantha M. Harden
Beginning With the End in Mind: Contextual Considerations for Scaling-Out a Community-Based Intervention
Frontiers in Public Health
RE-AIM
physical activity
cooperative Extension system
implementation science
translation
author_facet Laura E. Balis
Laura E. Balis
Thomas E. Strayer
NithyaPriya Ramalingam
Samantha M. Harden
author_sort Laura E. Balis
title Beginning With the End in Mind: Contextual Considerations for Scaling-Out a Community-Based Intervention
title_short Beginning With the End in Mind: Contextual Considerations for Scaling-Out a Community-Based Intervention
title_full Beginning With the End in Mind: Contextual Considerations for Scaling-Out a Community-Based Intervention
title_fullStr Beginning With the End in Mind: Contextual Considerations for Scaling-Out a Community-Based Intervention
title_full_unstemmed Beginning With the End in Mind: Contextual Considerations for Scaling-Out a Community-Based Intervention
title_sort beginning with the end in mind: contextual considerations for scaling-out a community-based intervention
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Public Health
issn 2296-2565
publishDate 2018-12-01
description Introduction: A number of effective physical activity programs for older adults exist, but are not widely delivered within community settings, such as the Cooperative Extension System. The purpose of this paper was to determine if an evidence-based intervention (EBI) developed in one state Extension system could be scaled-out to a new state system.Methods and results: The RE-AIM (reach, effectiveness, adoption, implementation, maintenance) framework was used to guide an iterative evaluation of three translational stages. Stage 1: Before program adoption, Extension health educators were surveyed and interviewed to assess physical activity programming perceptions and factors that may influence their decision to attend training or deliver the program in practice. Results indicated that a virtual, scalable training protocol would be necessary and that training needed to include hands-on instruction and be catered to those who were less confident in physical activity program delivery. Stage 2: Training attendees were surveyed pre- and post-training on factors related to the adoption-decision making process and contacted post-training to assess program delivery status. Training did not influence perceptions of the program, intent to deliver, or confidence in delivering the program. Stage 3: During program implementation, the program was evaluated through the RE-AIM framework by surveying across three key stakeholder groups: (1) program participants, (2) potential delivery personnel, and (3) Extension administrators. Findings indicate that the program has the potential to reach a large and representative proportion of the target audience, especially in rural areas. However, adoption and implementation rates among Extension health educators and community partners were low and data collection for effectiveness, implementation, and maintenance was a challenge.Conclusion: Overall, the results indicate initial struggles to translating and evaluating the program in a large, rural state. Implications for practice include making system-level changes to increase physical activity program adoption rates among Extension health educators and improve data collection and program evaluation through this community-based organization. More work is needed to identify infrastructure support and capacity to scale-out EBIs.
topic RE-AIM
physical activity
cooperative Extension system
implementation science
translation
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpubh.2018.00357/full
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