Erschienen in:
01.09.2010
Sustaining Evidence-based Interventions Under Real-world Conditions: Results from a Large-scale Diffusion Project
verfasst von:
Melissa K. Tibbits, Brian K. Bumbarger, Sandee J. Kyler, Daniel F. Perkins
Erschienen in:
Prevention Science
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Ausgabe 3/2010
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Abstract
This study examined factors associated with the predicted and actual post-funding sustainability of evidence-based interventions implemented as part of the Pennsylvania Commission on Crime and Delinquency’s Research-Based Delinquency and Violence Prevention Initiative. Correlates of predicted post-funding sustainability included program staff, overall school support, and school administrator support. Additionally, predicted post-funding sustainability was strongly associated with actual post-funding sustainability. Other correlates of actual post-funding sustainability included financial sustainability planning and aligning the intervention with the goals of the agency/school. Five years post-funding 33% of the interventions were no longer operating, 22% were operating at a reduced level, and 45% were operating at the same level or a higher level than the final year of funding. These findings are discussed in terms of implications for increasing intervention sustainability, as well as implications for future research on intervention sustainability.