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Comprehensive Cancer Control Collaborative of North Carolina 4CNC This presentation was supported by Cooperative Agreement Number 1U48DP005017 from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The findings and conclusions in this presentation are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily represent the official position of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 4CNC Team Jennifer Leeman - School of Nursing Noel Brewer - Health Behavior, School of Public Health Seth Noar - School of Journalism Kurt Ribisl - Health Behavior, School of Public Health Catherine Rohweder - Consortium for Implementation Science, School of Public Health Stephanie Wheeler - Health Policy & Management, School of Public Health Project Directors: Alexis Moore & Nancy Aycock North Carolinians Who Experience Cancer Disparities • Rural dwelling – 40% • African American – 22% • Below poverty level – 17% Rural and Urban Counties Urban Rural Presentation Objectives Tell you about… • 4CNC’s research focus - Advance the science of what strategies most effectively support practitioners as they plan and implement evidence-based approaches (EBAs) • Capacity Building Technical Assistance and Training Workgroup (CBTAT, 2009-2014) • 4CNC’s proposed project • Opportunities for cross-center collaboration 4CNC’s Focus – Advance Science of Prevention Support Wandersman et al., 2008; Fernandez et al., 2014 4CNC’s Focus – Prevention Support for Community Environment EBAs • Advance science of how to provide support (training, tools and technical assistance) to promote EBA planning and implementation • Develop a comprehensive approach that applies to a wide range of community environment EBAs • Start with focus on EBAs related to – Tobacco marketing and sales – Nutrition and physical activity Community Environment EBAs Tobacco • Smoke free policies • Retailer licensing and zoning • Increasing price of tobacco products Nutrition/Physical Activity • Joint use agreements • Walking trails • Access to healthy foods & beverages Community Environment EBAs Require New Approaches to Prevention Support • Few standardized, replicable EBAs • Change processes are – Complex and emergent – Multi-sector – Multi-level – Potentially polarizing Leeman, Myers, Ribisl, & Ammerman, 2014 Build on CBTAT Workgroup’s Training Curriculum • Putting Evidence into Action curriculum and Facilitator’s Guide – 7 modules on how to assess contexts and select, adapt, implement, and evaluate EBAs – Delivered curriculum in 14 workshops to 600+ practitioners nationwide – Soon to be posted to CPCRN website Led by Cam Escoffery at Emory (2009-2014) Build on CBTAT’s Systematic Review • Guided by Evidence-Based System of Innovation Support (EBSIS, Wandersman et al., 2012) • Reviewed studies of community-based prevention support interventions to identify – strategies used – variations in their format – evidence for effectiveness • 42 publications reporting findings from 29 studies Leeman et al., under review Systematic Review Findings Prevention Support Interventions Systematic Review Findings • Of 29 studies, 12 were group randomized trials – 12 assessed effects on adoption/implementation – 3 assessed effects on capacity – 2 assessed effects on planning behaviors – 4 compared effectiveness of different designs 4CNC’s Core Project Partner with community coalitions/teams to test and refine a prevention support intervention Training CBTAT Curriculum + Tools Developed by UNC or other CPCRN’s + Technical Assistance (TA) New! New – TA After Training • Walk teams/coalitions through a structured planning model as they – Engage cross-sector partners – Assess local environments – Collectively formulate an evidence-informed solution – Develop and execute an advocacy/implementation plan – Evaluate processes and outcomes TA Coupled with Tools Center for Training and Research Translation (centertrt.org) – Ammerman/Leeman PIs – CDC-funded 2004-2014 – Nutrition and physical activity Counter Tobacco (countertobacco.org) – Ribisl PI – CDC-funded 2009-2016 – Tobacco marketing at the Point of Sale Tools that Practitioners Can Use at Each Step in the Process • Tools to – Engage stakeholders – Collect local data – Raise awareness of problems and solutions – Develop and implement action plans – Evaluate processes and outcomes Leeman, Myers, Ribisl, & Ammerman, 2014 Assess Intervention Effectiveness • Assess effects on – Practitioner capacity (measure under development with CTSA funding) – Team/coalition planning behaviors – EBA adoption and implementation – EBA’s target outcomes Opportunities for Cross-Center Collaboration 1. Compare the effectiveness of prevention support formats (webinar vs in-person) Partnering CPCRN centers would • • • • Recruit two or more active coalitions Assist with intervention delivery Collect data Collaborate on interpreting findings, refining interventions and study measures, writing for publication • Collaborate on proposal for external funding Opportunities for Cross-Center Collaboration 2. Adapt the prevention support intervention and apply it to other community environment EBAs - Partnering centers would • Write site-specific findings • Contribute to cross-center paper on use of model across different focus areas 3. Shift focus to supporting systems change EBAs (e.g., HPV vaccination, Cancer Screening, Community/Clinical Linkages) In Summary • Improving community environments is central to supporting healthy behaviors and reducing cancer risk • Yet, practitioners often lack skills, tools and support to change community environments • CPCRN offers a unique platform for testing and strengthening the effectiveness of prevention support interventions