RE-AIM.org
> Researchers > Framework
Applying the RE-AIM Framework
to Health Behavior Interventions
How well does research translate into practice?
Is demonstrating efficacy enough?
The development of efficacious interventions is clearly
a priority among scientists interested in health promotion and the prevention
of behaviorally based chronic diseases. There are standard methods for
determining if an intervention was or was not efficacious.
In recent years there have been questions raised regarding
the necessity of evaluating other factors associated with these interventions.
Issues such as robustness, translatability and public
health impact have been identified as critical, yet they have
been given relatively little attention when compared to the reporting
of the effect of a given intervention.
In contrast to the availability of information regarding
intervention efficacy, there is no widely-available systematic framework
to evaluate potential for translation and public health impact.
To fill the research-practice gap, Russell Glasgow and
his associates designed an evaluation framework to expand assessment
of interventions beyond efficacy to multiple criteria that may better
identify the translatability and public health impact of health promotion
interventions.
They proposed that the translatability and public health
impact of such initiatives is best evaluated by examining all five of
the following dimensions:
-
Reach into
the target population
-
Efficacy or effectiveness
-
Adoption by
target settings or institutions
-
Implementation—consistency
of delivery of intervention
-
Maintenance of
intervention effects in individuals and populations over time.
Why are both individual and institutional levels
of impact important?
Individual Level Impact
Reach and efficacy are individual-levels of impact whereas
adoption and implementation are organizational-levels of impact. Maintenance
can be both an individual- and an organizational-level of impact. It
is pertinent to evaluate both levels because each provides valuable independent
information of intervention impact.
Take, for example, a school-based intervention that has
a large impact in terms of reach and efficacy at the individual-level
but is only adopted, implemented, and maintained at a small number of
organizations with specific resources that are not available in typical "real-world" schools.
Institutional Level Impact
If only the individual dimensions of the framework were
used to evaluate the intervention described here, it would be concluded
that the intervention has a large potential for impact. In reality, this
intervention has little hope of resulting in a large public health impact
because it could not be adopted, implemented, and maintained in real-world
settings.
This is also true of the converse situation where an intervention
has systemic organizational adoption, implementation, and maintenance,
but little reach, efficacy, or maintenance at the individual-level. Again,
if only one level was assessed (i.e., the organizational level), the
impact of the intervention would be considered large even though there
is no individual-level reach, efficacy, or maintenance.
^ top of page ^
|