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Volume 29, Issue 5: October, 2002
Abstract
Supporting Community-Based Prevention and Health Promotion
Initiatives: Developing Effective Technical Assistance Systems
Roger E. Mitchell, PhD, Paul Florin, PhD, and John F. Stevenson,
PhD
As research evidence for the effectiveness of community-based
prevention has mounted, so has recognition of the gap between
research and community practice. As a result, state and local
governments are taking a more active role in building the
capacity of community-based organizations to deliver evidence-based
prevention interventions. Innovations are taking place in
the establishment of technical assistance or support systems
to influence the prevention and health education activities
of community-based organizations. Several challenges for technical
assistance systems are described: (1) setting prevention priorities
and allocating limited technical assistance resources, (2)
balancing capacity-building versus program dissemination efforts,
(3) collaborating across categorical problem areas, (4) designing
technical assistance initiatives with enough "dose strength"
to have an effect, (5) balancing fidelity versus adaptation
in program implementation, (6) building organizational cultures
that support innovation, and (7) building local evaluative
capacity versus generalizable evaluation findings.
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