Intervention Mapping to Adapt Evidence-Based Interventions for Use in Practice: Increasing Mammography among African American Women
暂无分享,去创建一个
Patricia Dolan Mullen | Linda Highfield | Serena A. Rodriguez | L. K. Bartholomew | Maria E. Fernandez | P. Mullen | L. Highfield | M. Hartman | L. Kay Bartholomew | Marieke A. Hartman | L. Bartholomew | M. E. Fernandez
[1] Shawna J Lee,et al. Using Planned Adaptation to Implement Evidence-Based Programs with New Populations , 2008, American journal of community psychology.
[2] K. W. Harris,et al. The Guide to Community Preventive Services , 2005 .
[3] Patricia Dolan Mullen,et al. Five roles for using theory and evidence in the design and testing of behavior change interventions. , 2011, Journal of public health dentistry.
[4] A. Bandura. Social Foundations of Thought and Action: A Social Cognitive Theory , 1985 .
[5] D. Erwin,et al. Increasing mammography practice by African American women. , 1999, Cancer practice.
[6] A. Palermo,et al. Community engagement in research: frameworks for education and peer review. , 2010, American journal of public health.
[7] Maria E Fernandez,et al. Effectiveness of an Intervention to Increase Pap Test Screening Among Chinese Women in Taiwan , 2002, Journal of Community Health.
[8] The World Starts With Me: using intervention mapping for the systematic adaptation and transfer of school-based sexuality education from Uganda to Indonesia , 2011, Translational behavioral medicine.
[9] Delbert S. Elliott,et al. Issues in Disseminating and Replicating Effective Prevention Programs , 2004, Prevention Science.
[10] D. Stryer,et al. Practical clinical trials: increasing the value of clinical research for decision making in clinical and health policy. , 2003, JAMA.
[11] F P Rivara,et al. Systematic reviews of injury-prevention strategies for occupational injuries: an overview. , 2000, American journal of preventive medicine.
[12] P. Rosenberg,et al. Underlying causes of the black-white racial disparity in breast cancer mortality: a population-based analysis. , 2009, Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
[13] L. K. Bartholomew,et al. Evaluation of the Effectiveness and Implementation of an Adapted Evidence-Based Mammography Intervention for African American Women , 2015, BioMed research international.
[14] S. Cunningham,et al. How to Adapt Effective Programs for Use in New Contexts , 2011, Health promotion practice.
[15] R. Brownson,et al. Evidence-based public health: a fundamental concept for public health practice. , 2009, Annual review of public health.
[16] R. D'Agostino,et al. Community-based interventions to improve breast and cervical cancer screening: results of the Forsyth County Cancer Screening (FoCaS) Project. , 1999, Cancer epidemiology, biomarkers & prevention : a publication of the American Association for Cancer Research, cosponsored by the American Society of Preventive Oncology.
[17] Maria E. Fernandez,et al. Planning Health Promotion Programs: An Intervention Mapping Approach , 2006 .
[18] Andrea L. Cherrington,et al. Development of a Theory-Based (PEN-3 and Health Belief Model), Culturally Relevant Intervention on Cervical Cancer Prevention Among Latina Immigrants Using Intervention Mapping , 2012, Health promotion practice.
[19] Geoffrey M. Curran,et al. Effectiveness-implementation Hybrid Designs: Combining Elements of Clinical Effectiveness and Implementation Research to Enhance Public Health Impact , 2012, Medical care.
[20] S. Kelder,et al. Designing effective nutrition interventions for adolescents. , 2002, Journal of the American Dietetic Association.
[21] R. Wertz. Intention to Treat: Once Randomized, Always Analyzed , 1995 .
[22] M. Bauer,et al. Effectiveness-implementation hybrid designs: implications for quality improvement science , 2013, Implementation Science.
[23] Jianping Shen,et al. The Fidelity—Adaptation Relationship in Non-Evidence-Based Programs and its Implication for Program Evaluation , 2008 .
[24] D. Miglioretti,et al. Does Utilization of Screening Mammography Explain Racial and Ethnic Differences in Breast Cancer? , 2006, Annals of Internal Medicine.
[25] G. Botvin,et al. Advancing Prevention Science and Practice: Challenges, Critical Issues, and Future Directions , 2004, Prevention Science.
[26] R. Mayberry,et al. Factors related to noncompliance with screening mammogram appointments among low-income African-American women. , 2000, Journal of the National Medical Association.
[27] Jennifer Duffy,et al. Bridging the Gap Between Prevention Research and Practice: The Interactive Systems Framework for Dissemination and Implementation , 2008, American journal of community psychology.
[28] J. Wulu,et al. Family matters in mammography screening among African-American women age > 40. , 2008, Journal of the National Medical Association.
[29] N. Lurie,et al. Predictors of failure to attend scheduled mammography appointments at a Public Teaching Hospital , 1993, Journal of General Internal Medicine.
[30] Deborah Gelaude,et al. Adapting evidence-based behavioral interventions for new settings and target populations. , 2006, AIDS education and prevention : official publication of the International Society for AIDS Education.
[31] Christine M Markham,et al. Using Intervention Mapping to Adapt an Effective HIV, Sexually Transmitted Disease, and Pregnancy Prevention Program for High-Risk Minority Youth , 2005, Health promotion practice.
[32] V. Gebski,et al. Inclusion of patients in clinical trial analysis: the intention‐to‐treat principle , 2003, The Medical journal of Australia.
[33] R. Glasgow,et al. Why don't we see more translation of health promotion research to practice? Rethinking the efficacy-to-effectiveness transition. , 2003, American journal of public health.
[34] Sandeep K. Gupta,et al. Intention-to-treat concept: A review , 2011, Perspectives in clinical research.
[35] N. Lurie,et al. A randomized community trial to increase mammography utilization among low-income women living in public housing. , 1998, Preventive medicine.
[36] Abraham Wandersman,et al. Toward an Evidence-Based System for Innovation Support for Implementing Innovations with Quality: Tools, Training, Technical Assistance, and Quality Assurance/Quality Improvement , 2012, American journal of community psychology.
[37] Abigail A Fagan,et al. Implementing the LifeSkills Training drug prevention program: factors related to implementation fidelity , 2008, Implementation science : IS.
[38] M. Wanzer,et al. Perceptions of Health Care Providers' Communication: Relationships Between Patient-Centered Communication and Satisfaction , 2004, Health communication.
[39] D J Newell,et al. Intention-to-treat analysis: implications for quantitative and qualitative research. , 1992, International journal of epidemiology.
[40] Rebecca Smith-Bindman,et al. Factors associated with mammography utilization: a systematic quantitative review of the literature. , 2008, Journal of women's health.
[41] Maria E Fernandez,et al. Using Intervention Mapping as a Participatory Strategy , 2012, Health education & behavior : the official publication of the Society for Public Health Education.
[42] Dirk Hermans,et al. Empowerment implementation: enhancing fidelity and adaptation in a psycho-educational intervention. , 2014, Health promotion international.
[43] B. Rimer,et al. Can tailored interventions increase mammography use among HMO women? , 2000, American journal of preventive medicine.
[44] B. Rimer,et al. The effectiveness of interventions to promote mammography among women with historically lower rates of screening. , 2002, Cancer epidemiology, biomarkers & prevention : a publication of the American Association for Cancer Research, cosponsored by the American Society of Preventive Oncology.
[45] L. K. Bartholomew,et al. Grounding Evidence-Based Approaches to Cancer Prevention in the Community , 2014, Health promotion practice.