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Public health program capacity for sustainability: a new framework

TLDR
A new conceptual framework for program sustainability in public health is presented that suggests that a number of selected factors may be related to a program’s ability to sustain its activities and benefits over time.
Abstract
Public health programs can only deliver benefits if they are able to sustain activities over time. There is a broad literature on program sustainability in public health, but it is fragmented and there is a lack of consensus on core constructs. The purpose of this paper is to present a new conceptual framework for program sustainability in public health. This developmental study uses a comprehensive literature review, input from an expert panel, and the results of concept-mapping to identify the core domains of a conceptual framework for public health program capacity for sustainability. The concept-mapping process included three types of participants (scientists, funders, and practitioners) from several public health areas (e.g., tobacco control, heart disease and stroke, physical activity and nutrition, and injury prevention). The literature review identified 85 relevant studies focusing on program sustainability in public health. Most of the papers described empirical studies of prevention-oriented programs aimed at the community level. The concept-mapping process identified nine core domains that affect a program’s capacity for sustainability: Political Support, Funding Stability, Partnerships, Organizational Capacity, Program Evaluation, Program Adaptation, Communications, Public Health Impacts, and Strategic Planning. Concept-mapping participants further identified 93 items across these domains that have strong face validity—89% of the individual items composing the framework had specific support in the sustainability literature. The sustainability framework presented here suggests that a number of selected factors may be related to a program’s ability to sustain its activities and benefits over time. These factors have been discussed in the literature, but this framework synthesizes and combines the factors and suggests how they may be interrelated with one another. The framework presents domains for public health decision makers to consider when developing and implementing prevention and intervention programs. The sustainability framework will be useful for public health decision makers, program managers, program evaluators, and dissemination and implementation researchers.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Developing a comprehensive definition of sustainability.

TL;DR: A comprehensive definition of sustainability was developed based on definitions already used in the literature to identify five key sustainability constructs, which can be used as the basis for future research on sustainability.

Best practices for comprehensive tobacco control programs, 2014

TL;DR: Although the prevalence of cigarette smoking among youth decreased significantly from the late 1990s to 2003, the rate of decline has slowed in recent years, and several factors may have contributed, including smaller annual increases in the retail price of cigarettes, decreased exposure among youth to effective mass media tobacco control campaigns, and less funding for comprehensive statewide tobacco control programs.
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A systematic review of implementation frameworks of innovations in healthcare and resulting generic implementation framework

TL;DR: The selection of implementation framework(s) should be based not solely on the healthcare innovation to be implemented, but include other aspects of the framework’s orientation, e.g., the setting and end-user, as well as the degree of inclusion and depth of analysis of the implementation concepts.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sustainability of evidence-based healthcare: research agenda, methodological advances, and infrastructure support

TL;DR: The challenges associated with sustainability research are identified and recommendations for accelerating and strengthening this work are generated, including conceptual consistency and operational clarity for measuring sustainability.
References
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TL;DR: The specialty of obstetrics and gynaecology will benefit from several related groups already working within the Cochrane Collaboration, and it is hoped that the ‘wooden spoon’ can be discarded from the authors' ranks for good.
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Implementation Research in Mental Health Services: an Emerging Science with Conceptual, Methodological, and Training challenges

TL;DR: This paper seeks to advance implementation science in mental health services by over viewing the emergence of implementation as an issue for research, by addressing key issues of language and conceptualization, and by presenting a heuristic skeleton model for the study of implementation processes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Planning for the sustainability of community-based health programs: conceptual frameworks and future directions for research, practice and policy

TL;DR: It is suggested that the potential influences on sustainability may derive from three major groups of factors: project design and implementation factors, factors within the organizational setting, and factors in the broader community environment.
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