Title: REAIM: BACKGROUND, USE, AND APPLICATION TO BEHAVIORAL ONCOLOGY
1RE-AIM BACKGROUND, USE, AND APPLICATION TO
BEHAVIORAL ONCOLOGY
Russell E. Glasgow, Ph.D. Kaiser Permanente
Colorado Behavioral Cooperative Oncology
Group 2005 Fall Conference
2OVERVIEW
- Background, definitions, core concepts, state of
the science - Applying RE-AIM Use in planning and evaluation
self-rating exercise resources - Applications of RE-AIM Successes and failures
new developments future directions
3HISTORY/BACKGROUND FOR RE-AIM
- Late 1990s Increasingly clear that major
problems moving research into practice - Helpful models for understanding (e.g., Rogers)
and planning (e.g., Green Kreuter) health care
programs but no systematic models for translation - Almost total focus on efficacyassumed that
linear automatic process of efficacy ?
effectiveness ? dissemination -
4(No Transcript)
5RE-AIM TO HELP PLAN, EVALUATE, AND REPORT STUDIES
- R Increase Reach
- E Increase Effectiveness
- A Increase Adoption
- I Increase Implementation
- M Increase Maintenance
Glasgow, et al. Ann Behav Med 200427(1)3-12
6PURPOSES OF RE-AIM
- To broaden the criteria used to evaluate programs
to include external validity - To evaluate issues relevant to program adoption,
implementation, and sustainability - To help close the gap between research studies
and practice by - Informing design of interventions
- Providing guides for adoptees
- Suggesting standard reporting criteria
7RE-AIM DIMENSIONS AND DEFINITIONS
www.re-aim.org
8RE-AIM DIMENSIONS AND DEFINITIONS (cont.)
www.re-aim.org
9RECOMMENDED PURPOSE OF TRANSLATION/EFFECTIVENESS
RESEARCH
- To determine the characteristics of interventions
that can - Reach large numbers of people, especially those
who can most benefit - Be widely adopted by different settings
- Be consistently implemented by staff members with
moderate levels of training and expertise - Produce replicable and long-lasting effects (and
minimal negative impacts) at reasonable cost
10BRIEF SMOKING CESSATION IN PLANNED PARENTHOOD
CLINICS A RANDOMIZED TRIAL
- R.E. Glasgow, E.P. Whitlock,
- E.G. Eakin E. Lichtenstein
Am J Public Health200096786-789
11SETTING AND CONTEXT
Four Planned Parenthood Clinics in the Pacific
Northwest
- Serve predominantly female, low-income population
(57 lt 125 of poverty level) - Clients seen while at general health and
contraceptive visits - Providers are nurse practitioners and physician
assistants - Participant average age 24 smoked for 6 years
lt 30 intended to quit in next month
12ADOPTION
- Approached 4 PP clinics in Portland, Oregon, that
had most diverse, low SES populations - All 4 clinics and all of providers in each clinic
participated
13RECRUITMENT AND REACH
- Approach all female smokers (age 15-35) when in
waiting room for usual visit - 99 had smoking status identified
- 76 of these approached participated, n1154
- No differences, participants vs.
non- participants
14INTERVENTION
- Brief written assessment (barriers, readiness to
change) - 9 min. video developed for this project
- Clinician advice to quit
- Brief motivational interviewing, barriers-based
cessation counseling (12-15 min.) - 2 follow-up phone calls
15IMPLEMENTATION
100
93
85
Percent ReceivingInterventionComponent
43
11
SawVideo
ReceivedCounseling
ProviderAdvice
gt 1Call
gt 2Calls
16EFFECTIVENESS
6-week Cessation Rates(1-week abstinence
criterion)
Intent to Treat
Present at Follow-up
11
10.2
7
6.9
Both significant, p lt .05
17MAINTENANCEAT 6 MONTHS
- Intent to treat, 30-day self-report 11.6 vs.
8.5, NS - Biochemically confirmed abstinence 6.4 vs.
3.8, NS - Small, but statistically significantly greater
reductions among continuing smokers in
intervention, p lt .05
18CONCLUSIONS FROM PP STUDY
- Feasible to reach a high percentage of young
female smokers in these settings - Regular PP staff able to deliver intervention
consistently (but high turnover rates) - Except phone calls
19CONCLUSIONS FROM PP STUDY (cont.)
- Excitement about involvement from clinical staff
as long as demands are reasonable and are of
benefit to clients - Short-term success, but maintenance is
challenging and need different follow-up support
components
20ULTIMATE IMPACT OF MAGIC DIET PILL
Dissemination Step Concept Impacted
50 of Clinics Use Adoption 50
50 of Clinicians Prescribe Adoption 25
50 of Patients Accept Medication Reach 12.5
50 Follow Regimen Correctly Implementation 6.2
50 of Those Taking Correctly Benefit Effective
ness 3.2
50 Continue to Benefit After 6
Months Maintenance 1.6
21MORAL OF THE STORY?
- Focus on the Denominator
- (Each step of the dissemination
- sequence, or each RE-AIM
- dimension is important)
22APPLICATIONS OF RE-AIM
- Used in increasing number of publications to
evaluate health promotion and recently,
medication safety issues - Used in planning at least one national physical
activity program for older adultswith 14
different grantees - Used in number of published literature reviews
See www.re-aim.org
23ADOPTION FOR POLICY/DECISION MAKING
- RE-AIM used by CDC to evaluate practicality and
generalizability of evidence-based obesity
interventions - RE-AIM used by national WISEWOMAN program for
low-income women for qualitative and quantitative
evaluation - RE-AIM used by Robert Wood Johnson Foundation to
help plan and evaluate 13 primary care,
practice-based research network projects
24BCC Reach and Translation Workshop Health
Behavior Change Literature Review
- PURPOSE Review the recent literature on
intervention research in major health promotion
journals concerning reporting on internal and
external validity issues - SELECTION CRITERIA Controlled intervention
study on smoking cessation, nutrition, or
physical activity published from 1996-2000 in
10-12 leading behavioral medicine journals
(chosen based on circulation, publication of
treatment studies, general not specialty journal)
Funded by a grant from the Robert Wood Johnson
Foundation
25RE-AIM LITERATURE REVIEW CONTROLLED STUDIES
1996-2000 IDENTIFIED BY JOURNAL AND BEHAVIOR
Glasgow, et al., 2004, Ann Behav Med, 28(2)75-80
26PERCENT OF STUDIES REPORTING ON RE-AIM
DIMENSIONSIndividual Level
27PERCENT OF STUDIES REPORTING ON RE-AIM
DIMENSIONSSetting Level
28SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS OF REVIEW
- Data are seldom reported on external validity.
Particular attention is need to the
representativeness of participants, settings, and
intervention staff. - Should report on reach, adoption, implementation,
and maintenance, in addition to effectiveness. - The actions and representativeness of
intervention settings and agents are as important
as the behavior and representativenss of
subjectsand have received far less investigation.
29RECOMMENDED PURPOSE OF FUTURE RESEARCH
- To determine the characteristics of interventions
that can - Reach large numbers of people, especially those
who can most benefit - Be widely adopted by different settings
- Be consistently implemented by staff members
with moderate levels of training and expertise - Produce replicable and long-lasting effects
(and minimal negative impacts) at reasonable
cost
30CONCLUSION
The world is complex, contextual, and multiply
determined.
Designs and measures for translational research
should also incorporate these characteristics