1 / 21

The CPCRN, DCPC, NCI, and the Community Guide: Areas for Collaboration and Supportive Work

The CPCRN, DCPC, NCI, and the Community Guide: Areas for Collaboration and Supportive Work. Shawna L. Mercer, MSc, PhD Director The Guide to Community Preventive Services (Community Guide). Why is collaboration with DPCP, NCI, and the CPCRN important to the Community Guide?.

gilles
Télécharger la présentation

The CPCRN, DCPC, NCI, and the Community Guide: Areas for Collaboration and Supportive Work

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The CPCRN, DCPC, NCI, and the Community Guide: Areas for Collaboration and Supportive Work Shawna L. Mercer, MSc, PhD Director The Guide to Community Preventive Services (Community Guide)

  2. Why is collaboration with DPCP, NCI, and the CPCRN important to the Community Guide?

  3. Community Guide: How is it Used? • To inform decision making around: • Practice (initiatives, programs) • Policy making • Research • Funding for research and programs

  4. A Typical Approach to Developing and Disseminating Evidence Based Recommendations: A Push Model Systematic Review of the Scientific Evidence By researchers Dissemination Practice, Policy

  5. Addressing This Challenge • By actively engaging in conducting and disseminating the systematic review those who are expected to be the users and beneficiaries of the research, it is more likely the findings and recommendations will be relevant to their needs

  6. Systematic Reviews of the Effectiveness of Community Preventive Services Surveillance & Evaluation Monitoring, Needs Assessment Action Practice, Policy Knowledge to Action Continuum How to Measure Effects Dissemination Participation and Collaboration Identify Research- Practice Gaps Translation Planning, Assessing Uptake and Quality Shawna L. Mercer, MSc, PhD & Lawrence W. Green, DrPH, 2006

  7. Community Guide Places Equal Weight on: • The quality of the systematic review methods and analysis • The group processes • Participation and collaboration

  8. So Whose Participation Do We Seek in our Systematic Reviews? • Who is to be affected by the recommendations and findings? Who are the intended users? • Practitioners (health care, public health, other) • Policy makers • Health departments • Professional, nongovernmental organizations • Community-based organizations • Employers, employees • Minority or special populations • Researchers • Research funders • Educators

  9. Intended Users Participation: Are we… • Prioritizing the right topics and interventions for review? • Asking the right questions? • Staying true to the important questions over the course of the review? • Appropriately considering context, other issues of applicability to different settings, populations? • Thinking proactively about interpretability, relevance, usefulness, use? • Planning for and undertaking dissemination and translation into action from the outset?

  10. Participants in the Community Guide • Official Liaisons • >28 federal agency and organizational • NIH, AHRQ, VA, Armed Forces, PRC Program, etc. • State and local health departments, boards of health • Physician, nurse, public health, other organizations • Roles: • Provide input into prioritization of topics, reviews, Task Force findings and recommendations • Serve on, or recommend participants for review teams • Participate in dissemination and translation of Task Force findings, especially to their constituents

  11. Participants in the Community Guide • Stakeholders, partners • Only interested in specific topics, reviews • E.g., mental health organizations • Roles: • Participate on review teams • Provide input into topic prioritization, reviews, Task Force findings and recommendations • Participate in dissemination, translation

  12. Participants in Individual Reviews • Coordination Team (n=~10-15) • Coordinating scientist (typically Community Guide) • Fellows, abstractors (Community Guide) • Subject matter experts and users • From CDC, other federal agencies, academia, practice, policy settings • Task Force member(s) • [Liaison(s)] • Consultation Team (n=~20-60) • subject matter experts • Community Guide Staff

  13. What Kinds of Collaboration and Supportive Actions would be Valuable?

  14. Systematic Reviews of the Effectiveness of Community Preventive Services Surveillance & Evaluation Monitoring, Needs Assessment Action Practice, Policy Knowledge to Action Continuum How to Measure Effects Dissemination Participation and Collaboration Identify Research- Practice Gaps Translation Planning, Assessing Uptake and Quality Shawna L. Mercer, MSc, PhD & Lawrence W. Green, DrPH, 2006

  15. 1. Conduct of Systematic Reviews • Increasing Cancer Screening • February 2010 Task Force meeting • Reducing Structural Barriers • One-on-One Education • Remaining interventions: • Client Reminders • Client Incentives • Small Media • Provide Reminders • Multicomponent

  16. Conduct of Systematic Reviews

  17. 2. Dissemination, Translation, Implementation • Your ongoing projects to assist intended users with all aspects of: • Accessing Community Guide recommendations • Assessing community needs and capacities • Evidence-informed decision making • Implementing Community Guide recommendations • Community Guide interest: • Linking to, featuring your work • Featuring your success, implementation stories

  18. 3. Evaluation and Feedback • Assisting users with evaluating their programs, initiatives • Outcome, process • Better understanding the balance between fidelity and adaptability • Community Guide interest: • Identifying additional questions that the Community Guide should consider in its future rounds • Securing practice-based evidence • Developing and using common measures

  19. 4. Filling Research Gaps Identified by the Community Guide • Where the evidence is insufficient • Applicability, generalizability • More information regarding populations, settings, deliverers (especially professional vs. lay, promotoras) • Repeat screening • Considering the effect of baseline screening rates on the expected impact of interventions • CPCRN providing a “sufficient” body of evidence • Developing and using common measures • Community Guide interest • Feeding all of this information back to inform our work

  20. www.thecommunityguide.org

  21. For More Information Shawna Mercer, MSc, PhD Community Guide Director SMercer@cdc.gov www.thecommunityguide.org The findings and conclusions in this presentation are those of the presenter and do not necessarily represent the views of CDC.

More Related