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National Dissemination of Chronic Disease Self-Management Education Programs: An Incremental Examination of Delivery Characteristics

National Dissemination of Chronic Disease Self-Management Education Programs: An Incremental Examination of Delivery Characteristics
With a near 20-year developmental history as an evidence-based program, the suite of Chronic Disease Self-Management Education (CDSME) programs were selected in 2010 for grand-scale dissemination in a federally supported initiative to improve the health of older Americans. The primary charge of this national effort was to establish a sustainable program delivery system for empowering American adults with one or more chronic conditions to better manage their health. The current study focused on a series of dissemination and implementation science research questions to: (1) examine the geographic distribution of participation in this initiative across the Unites States; (2) describe workshop characteristics engaged to reach program participants in various settings; and (3) describe personal characteristics of the first 100,000 participants. Each subsequent entering cohort was descriptively examined to indicate whether there was constancy or change in delivery sites and populations reached over time. Findings show a strengthening of the workshop delivery infrastructure in that it took 9.4 months to reach the first 25,000 participants in 853 counties compared to 5.4 months to reach the last 25,000 participants in 1,109 counties. The workshop delivery characteristics and participant characteristics remained relatively consistent across increments of 25,000 participants reached, although general trends were observed for some variables. For example, after reaching the first 25,000 participants, subsequent groups of 25,000 participants were reached more quickly. Additionally, workshops were increasingly delivered in ZIP Codes with higher percentages of families residing below the federal poverty line. As more participants were reached, more participants with chronic conditions were enrolled. This national translational study illustrates the rapid expansion of CDSME programs throughout the United States and capability to reach diverse populations in a variety of settings.
- University of California System United States
- Texas A&M Health Science Center United States
- The University of Texas System United States
- Stanford University United States
- University of Georgia Georgia
Aging, Chronic disease self-management, evidence-based program, 150, chronic disease self-management, No Poverty, Clinical Research, Health Services and Systems, Health Sciences, Health services and systems, Evaluation, older adults, Public health, evaluation, 027, program reach, Health Services, sustainability, Public Health and Health Services, program implementation, Generic health relevance, Public Health, Public aspects of medicine, RA1-1270
Aging, Chronic disease self-management, evidence-based program, 150, chronic disease self-management, No Poverty, Clinical Research, Health Services and Systems, Health Sciences, Health services and systems, Evaluation, older adults, Public health, evaluation, 027, program reach, Health Services, sustainability, Public Health and Health Services, program implementation, Generic health relevance, Public Health, Public aspects of medicine, RA1-1270
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