By Calondra Tibbs, MPH, Senior Director, Safe and Healthy Families, NACCHO
Positive relationships between caregivers and children play an important role in the health and well-being of children throughout their lives. Establishing safe, stable, and nurturing environments and relationships and limiting exposure to adverse experiences (e.g., trauma, abuse, and neglect) can potentially reduce poor health outcomes and behaviors in a child’s adolescent and adult lives.1 The Adverse Childhood Experience (ACE) Study demonstrated that increased exposure to maltreatment can increase risk for alcoholism and alcohol abuse, illicit drug use, liver disease, smoking, unintended pregnancies, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.1
NACCHO, with support from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation (through the CDC Foundation), implemented a multi-year Triple P Implementation Project to learn more about systems interventions to address child maltreatment. The project aimed to understand and learn more about how public health and primary care partnerships could implement Triple P—Positive Parenting Program, an evidence‐based system of interventions that enhances parental knowledge, skills, and confidence to prevent and address behavioral, emotional, and developmental problems in children.
Using the conceptual framework and drivers for program implementation developed by National Implementation Research Network (NIRN), NACCHO evaluated Triple P implementation in two communities to determine the successes, challenges, and opportunities for public health and primary care collaboration to implement the Triple P program. Table 1 provides an overview of the evaluation findings, using the NIRN framework.
Table 1. Summary of Evaluation Findings Using the NIRN Framework
Stage of Implementation | Description | Evaluation Findings |
Exploration | Communities assess the match between their needs and the fit of an intervention |
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Installation | Communities acquire resources to prepare for implementation |
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Initial Implementation | Organizations begin to adapt new practice, manage change, and initiate improvement |
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Full Implementation | The intervention is fully operational, and 50% or more of the intended practitioners are using Triple P with fidelity. |
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Triple P is a promising evidence-based parenting support strategy that both providers and parents find appealing. LHDs have the connections to mobilize partners to implement a community-wide initiative. As this project shows, LHDs, or likely any agency, may face significant challenges when implementing this model. Implementing evidence-based practices on a community-wide basis requires considerable time and the support of multiple entities at various levels. This evaluation provides some lessons from one such attempt that can inform future efforts at implementing Triple P and other evidence-based practices.
For more information about the Triple P Implementation Project, read NACCHO’s report, Local Health Department Implementation of Triple P: Experiences of Berrien County, Michigan, and Pitt County, North Carolina.
Additonal NACCHO Resources
Local Health Department Efforts to Prevent Child Maltreatment report – http://eweb.naccho.org/prd/?na689pdf
Public Health Efforts to Prevent Child Maltreatment webinar – https://naccho.adobeconnect.com/p53nna2lgm8
References
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE) Study: Major Findings. Retrieved June 1, 2015, from http://www.cdc.gov/violenceprevention/acestudy/