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Using the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR) to understand student perceptions of reach, relevance, and fit of opioid overdose education and naloxone distribution programs on university campuses
Lee, Matthew; Alexander, Savannah P; Shelton, Elizabeth; Tharp, G; Li, WaiKwan Bonnie; Bernitz, Melanie; McNeil, Michael; Rosen-Metsch, Lisa; Shelton, Rachel C
BACKGROUND:Opioid overdose education and naloxone distribution (OEND) programs provide naloxone kits and training on recognizing and responding to opioid overdoses. While there are some early adopters of college campus OEND programs, this important setting remains underutilized. PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:We conducted research on student-level perceptions of the reach, relevance, and fit of routine OEND implementation on a college campus in New York City. METHODS:Semi-structured, in-depth qualitative interviews (n = 40) were completed across three student groups: (i) those who were invited to and attended an OEND training, and opted to take a free naloxone kit (n = 24); (ii) those who were invited, but did not attend a training (n = 13); and (iii) those who were invited and attended a training, but did not take a kit (n = 3). We employed a framework-driven pragmatic qualitative approach using the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR). RESULTS:Our findings, synthesized across groups, were: (i) students were generally receptive to OEND program implementation on campuses broadly including their own, but perceived it as more relevant to the outer setting surrounding campus, which universities need to engage; (ii) beyond OEND programs, students expressed wanting better access to broader substance use and mental health services; and (iii) students described the need for improved university communications about its commitments to OEND program implementation to promote relevance and reach. CONCLUSIONS:This study provides in-depth understanding of student-level perceptions around implementing campus OEND programs and identifies opportunities to improve future implementation and sustainability.
PMID: 41208212
ISSN: 1613-9860
CID: 5965652
Community health workers: developing roles in public health dementia efforts in the United States
Johnson, Elma; Lewis, Mickal; Nordyke, Alexandra; Lee, Matthew; Roberts, Shelby; Gaugler, Joseph E; Borson, Soo
Community Health Workers (CHWs) are a growing part of the healthcare workforce. Trusted in their communities, CHWs can provide essential health education and connection with culturally responsive health and support resources and programs. Despite their demonstrated effectiveness in improving outcomes in other chronic diseases such as diabetes, hypertension, HIV, and pediatric asthma, CHWs have been underutilized in dementia-related efforts. Properly equipped with education and skills, CHWs can fill important gaps throughout the dementia care continuum, strengthening public health efforts to support people with dementia and their families, especially in populations at higher risk such as African American, Latino and American Indian/Alaska Native groups. We outline key roles CHWs can play throughout the continuum of dementia care, improving brain health and reducing dementia risk at all life stages, such as improving early detection of cognitive impairment and helping caregivers navigate the daily challenges of dementia care in the community setting. Finally, we highlight key actions public health can lead to support the development of a dementia-capable workforce nationwide.
PMCID:12263905
PMID: 40672929
ISSN: 2296-2565
CID: 5897392
LGBTQ+ cancer: priority or lip service? A qualitative content analysis of LGBTQ+ considerations in U.S. state, jurisdiction, and tribal comprehensive cancer control plans
Waters, Austin R; Bono, Madeline H; Ito Fukunaga, Mayuko; Masud, Manal; Mullins, Megan A; Suk, Ryan; O'Leary, Meghan C; Adams, Swann A; Ferrari, Renée M; Wangen, Mary; Odebunmi, Olufeyisayo O; Nash, Sarah H; Spees, Lisa P; Wheeler, Stephanie B; Adsul, Prajakta; Chebli, Perla; Hirschey, Rachel; Studts, Jamie L; Seaman, Aaron; Lee, Matthew
The National Comprehensive Cancer Control Program, a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention funded program, supports cancer coalitions across the United States (US) in efforts to prevent and control cancer including development of comprehensive cancer control (CCC) plans. CCC plans often focus health equity within their priorities, but it is unclear to what extent lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer/questioning, plus (LGBTQ+) populations are considered in CCC plans. We qualitatively examined to what extent LGBTQ+ populations were referenced in 64 U.S. state, jurisdiction, tribes, and tribal organization CCC plans. A total of 55% of CCC plans mentioned LGBTQ+ populations, however, only one in three CCC plans mentioned any kind of LGBTQ+ inequity or LGBTQ+ specific recommendations. Even fewer plans included mention of LGBTQ+ specific resources, organizations, or citations. At the same time almost three fourths of plans conflated sex and gender throughout their CCC plans. The findings of this study highlight the lack of prioritization of LGBTQ+ populations in CCC plans broadly while highlighting exemplar plans that can serve as a roadmap to more inclusive future CCC plans. Comprehensive cancer control plans can serve as a key policy and advocacy structure to promote a focus on LGBTQ+ cancer prevention and control.
PMID: 38796675
ISSN: 1573-7225
CID: 5662792
Strategies to improve delivery of equitable and evidence-informed care for pregnant and birthing people with a substance use disorder in acute care settings: A scoping review protocol
King, Carla; Laynor, Gregory; McNeely, Jennifer; Fawole, Adetayo; Lee, Matthew; Terplan, Mishka; Choi, Sugy
This protocol outlines a proposed scoping review to characterize evidence on implementation and quality improvement (QI) strategies that aim to improve equitable, evidence-informed care delivery for pregnant and birthing people with substance use disorder (SUD) in acute care. Untreated SUD during pregnancy is associated with an increased risk of overdose and severe maternal morbidity. Acute care settings are one important place to deliver equitable, evidence-informed clinical care. While clinical practice guidelines for substance use treatment and care of pregnant and birthing people with SUD exist, there are gaps in implementation. Our population of interest is pregnant and birthing people with SUD in an acute care setting. We will include US-based studies that describe or evaluate implementation or QI strategies, including experimental, observational, and descriptive studies published from 2016 to 2023. The proposed scoping review will be conducted in accordance with JBI methodology for scoping reviews and registered at OSF (registration number: BC4VZ). We will search MEDLINE (PubMed), CINAHL Complete (EBSCO), Scopus (Elsevier), and APA PsychInfo (Ovid) for published studies. Conference proceedings and Perinatal Quality Collaborative websites will be searched for grey literature. Two reviewers will independently screen then extract studies that meet inclusion criteria using a data extraction tool. The completion of this scoping review will help illuminate strengths and gaps in research and practice that aim to inform substance use treatment and care in acute care settings for pregnant and birthing people with SUD.
PMCID:10947689
PMID: 38498563
ISSN: 1932-6203
CID: 5640152
Organization Theory for Implementation Science (OTIS): reflections and recommendations
Birken, Sarah A; Baloh, Jure; Kegler, Michelle C; Huang, Terry T-K; Lee, Matthew; Adsul, Prajakta; Ryan, Grace; Peluso, Alexandra; Wagi, Cheyenne; Randazzo, Aliza; Mullins, Megan A; Morrill, Kristin E; Ko, Linda K
Organizations exert influence on the implementation of evidence-based practices and other innovations that are independent of the influence of organizations' individual constituents. Despite their influence, nuanced explanations of organizations' influence remain limited in implementation science. Organization theories are uniquely suited to offer insights and explain organizational influences on implementation. In this paper, we describe the efforts of the Cancer Prevention and Control Research Network's (CPCRN) Organization Theory for Implementation Science (OTIS) workgroup to equip implementation scientists with theory-guided understanding of organizational influences on implementation. We provide a set of recommendations for future efforts to enhance implementation through the use of organization theories and OTIS tools.
PMCID:11671523
PMID: 39735213
ISSN: 2813-0146
CID: 5805422
IDEAL: A Community-Academic-Governmental Collaboration Toward Improving Evidence-Based Data Collection on Race and Ethnicity
Kader, Farah; Ðoàn, Lan N; Chin, Matthew K; Scherer, Maya; Cárdenas, Luisa; Feng, Lloyd; Leung, Vanessa; Gundanna, Anita; Lee, Matthew; Russo, Rienna; Ogedegbe, Olugbenga G; John, Iyanrick; Cho, Ilseung; Kwon, Simona C; Yi, Stella S
PMCID:10599325
PMID: 37824700
ISSN: 1545-1151
CID: 5603912
The national public health response to Alzheimer's disease and related dementias: Origins, evolution, and recommendations to improve early detection
Vinze, Sanjna; Chodosh, Joshua; Lee, Matthew; Wright, Jacob; Borson, Soo
Longstanding gaps in the detection of Alzheimer's disease and related dementias (ADRD) and biopsychosocial care call for public health action to improve population health. We aim to broaden the understanding of the iterative role state plans have played over the last 20 years in prioritizing improvements in the detection of ADRD, primary care capacity, and equity for disproportionately affected populations. Informed by national ADRD priorities, state plans convene stakeholders to identify local needs, gaps, and barriers and set the stage for development of a national public health infrastructure that can align clinical practice reform with population health goals. We propose policy and practice actions that would accelerate the collaboration between public health, community organizations, and health systems to improve ADRD detection-the point of entry into care pathways that could ultimately improve outcomes on a national scale. HIGHLIGHTS: We systematically reviewed the evolution of state/territory plans for Alzheimer's disease and related dementias (ADRD). Plan goals improved over time but lacked implementation capacity. Landmark federal legislation (2018) enabled funding for action and accountability. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) funds three Public Health Centers of Excellence and many local initiatives. Four new policy steps would promote sustainable ADRD population health improvement.
PMID: 37435983
ISSN: 1552-5279
CID: 5537612
Policy Dissemination and Implementation Research
Chapter by: Purtle, Jonathan; Crable, Erika L; Cruden, Gracelyn; Lee, Mathew; Lengnick-Hall, Rebecca; Silver, Diana; Raghavan, Ramesh
in: Dissemination and Implementation Research in Health: Translating Science to Practice by Brownson, Ross C[Ed]; Colditz, Graham A[Ed]; Proctor, Enola K[Ed]
pp. -
ISBN: 9780197660690
CID: 5571952
Health framework for understanding the health and health disparities of Asian American populations
Chapter by: Trinh-Shevrin, Chau; Sacks, Rachel; Kwon, Simona C; Lee, Matthew; Min, Deborah K; Islam, Nadia
in: Applied Population Health Approaches for Asian American Communities by Kwon, Simona; Trinh-Shevrin, Chau; Islam, Nadia S; Yi, Stella
[S.l.] : Wiley, 2023
pp. ?-
ISBN: 978-1-119-67856-4
CID: 5356662
Participatory dissemination and implementation research in community settings
Chapter by: Lee, Matthew; Kwon, Simona C
in: Applied Population Health Approaches for Asian American Communities by Kwon, Simona; Trinh-Shevrin, Chau; Islam, Nadia S; Yi, Stella
[S.l.] : Wiley, 2023
pp. ?-
ISBN: 978-1-119-67856-4
CID: 5295412