Linking Implementation to Outcomes: Evaluation of a Community-Based Breast and Cervical Cancer Screening Program
- 1 April 1996
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in International Quarterly of Community Health Education
- Vol. 16 (1), 5-23
- https://doi.org/10.2190/nweb-38pk-afxv-ludd
Abstract
An implementation analysis of the first eighteen months of the Maryland Breast and Cervical Cancer Program examined the variability among participating local agencies in the extent of screening services delivered; local program implementation processes; and the relationships between extent of screening and the local level processes. The study used: 1) a mail and telephone survey of local health departments (LHD, N = 24) and 2) state program surveillance data, with correlational methods. Outcomes measured: 1) “Penetration,” the proportion of the target population screened; and 2) “Efficiency,” the number of women screened per program staff member. Categories of implementation variables were: 1) Environment, 2) Staffing, 3) Collaboration with community organizations, 4) Outreach, 5) Provider variables, 6) Relationships with State and LHDs, 7) Organizational variables, and 8) Service delivery. Results showed wide local variability in screening levels. Availability of local resources; provider involvement; success of community linkages; and local health department readiness showed relationships with the extent of local screening. Studying implementation is needed to improve the effectiveness and efficiency of community-based programs.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Diffusion of Innovations in Schools: A Study of Adoption and Implementation of School-Based Tobacco Prevention CurriculaAmerican Journal of Health Promotion, 1995
- Social socience theory in health education: time for a new model?Health Education Research, 1993
- CoalitionsHealth Education Research, 1993
- Barriers to screening for breast cancerCancer, 1992
- Adequacy of cervical cancer screening among innercity women: results from a defined populationHealth Education Research, 1989
- How to Institutionalize Health Promotion ProgramsAmerican Journal of Health Promotion, 1989
- Barriers to implementation of a prenatal care program for low income women.American Journal of Public Health, 1989
- Checking the congruence between a program and its organizational environmentNew Directions for Program Evaluation, 1988
- The diffusion and adoption of worksite health promotion innovations: An analysis of barriersPreventive Medicine, 1986
- Cancer preventive screening behavior among elderly womenPreventive Medicine, 1982