| Literature DB >> 20376336 |
Richard Spoth1, Max Guyll, Catherine J Lillehoj, Cleve Redmond, Mark Greenberg.
Abstract
This study examined a community-university partnership model for sustained, high-quality implementation of evidence-based interventions. In the context of a randomized study, it assessed whether implementation quality for both family-focused and school-based universal interventions could be achieved and maintained through community-university partnerships. It also conducted exploratory analyses of factors influencing implementation quality. Results revealed uniformly high rates of both implementation adherence-averaging over 90%-and of other indicators of implementation quality for both family-focused and school-based interventions. Moreover, implementation quality was sustained across two cohorts. Exploratory analyses failed to reveal any significant correlates for family-intervention implementation quality, but did show that some team and instructor characteristics were associated with school-based implementation quality.Year: 2007 PMID: 20376336 PMCID: PMC2849143 DOI: 10.1002/jcop.20207
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Community Psychol ISSN: 0090-4392