Cost Analysis of a Randomized Trial of Getting to Outcomes Implementation Support of CHOICE in Boys and Girls Clubs in Southern California

被引:0
|
作者
Patricia M. Herman
Matthew Chinman
Jill Cannon
Patricia Ebener
Patrick S. Malone
Joie Acosta
Elizabeth J. D’Amico
机构
[1] RAND Corporation,
[2] RAND Corporation,undefined
[3] Malone Quantitative,undefined
[4] RAND Corporation,undefined
来源
Prevention Science | 2020年 / 21卷
关键词
Implementation support; Evidence-based programs; Adolescent prevention programs; Substance use prevention; Cost analysis;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Costs of supporting prevention program implementation are not well known. This study estimates the societal costs of implementing CHOICE, a voluntary after-school alcohol and other drug prevention program for adolescents, in Boys and Girls Clubs (BGCs) across Southern California with and without an implementation support system called Getting To Outcomes© (GTO). This article uses micro-costing methods to estimate the cost of the CHOICE program and GTO support. Labor and expense data were obtained from logs kept by the BGC staff and by the GTO technical assistance (TA) staff, and staff time was valued based on Bureau of Labor Statistics estimates. From the societal perspective, the cost of implementing CHOICE at BGCs over the 2-year study period was $27 per attendee when CHOICE was offered by itself (all costs incurred by the BGCs) and $177 per attendee when CHOICE was offered with GTO implementation support ($67 cost to the BGCs; $110 to the entity funding GTO). These results were most sensitive to assumptions as to the number of times CHOICE was offered per year. Adding GTO implementation support to CHOICE increased the cost per attendee by approximately $150. For this additional cost, there was evidence that the CHOICE program was offered with more fidelity and offered more often after the 2-year intervention ended. If the long-term benefits of this better and continued implementation are found to exceed these additional costs, GTO could be an attractive structure to support evidence-based substance misuse prevention programs. Trial Registration. This project is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov with number NCT02135991 (URL: https://clinicaltrials.gov/show/NCT02135991). The trial was registered May 12, 2014.
引用
收藏
页码:245 / 255
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Cost Analysis of a Randomized Trial of Getting to Outcomes Implementation Support of CHOICE in Boys and Girls Clubs in Southern California
    Herman, Patricia M.
    Chinman, Matthew
    Cannon, Jill
    Ebener, Patricia
    Malone, Patrick S.
    Acosta, Joie
    D'Amico, Elizabeth J.
    PREVENTION SCIENCE, 2020, 21 (02) : 245 - 255
  • [2] Cost analysis of a randomized trial of Getting to Outcomes implementation support for a teen pregnancy prevention program offered in Boys and Girls Clubs in Alabama and Georgia
    Herman, Patricia M.
    Chinman, Matthew
    Ebener, Patricia
    Malone, Patrick S.
    Acosta, Joie
    PREVENTION SCIENCE, 2020, 21 (08) : 1114 - 1125
  • [3] Cost analysis of a randomized trial of Getting to Outcomes implementation support for a teen pregnancy prevention program offered in Boys and Girls Clubs in Alabama and Georgia
    Patricia M. Herman
    Matthew Chinman
    Patricia Ebener
    Patrick S. Malone
    Joie Acosta
    Prevention Science, 2020, 21 : 1114 - 1125
  • [4] Testing implementation support for evidence-based programs in community settings: a replication cluster-randomized trial of Getting To Outcomes®
    Matthew Chinman
    Patricia Ebener
    Patrick S. Malone
    Jill Cannon
    Elizabeth J. D’Amico
    Joie Acosta
    Implementation Science, 13
  • [5] Testing implementation support for evidence-based programs in community settings: a replication cluster-randomized trial of Getting To Outcomes®
    Chinman, Matthew
    Ebener, Patricia
    Malone, Patrick S.
    Cannon, Jill
    D'Amico, Elizabeth J.
    Acosta, Joie
    IMPLEMENTATION SCIENCE, 2018, 13
  • [6] Outcomes of a Randomized Community Trial to Increase Pap Testing among Pacific Islanders in Southern California
    Tanjasiri, Sora Park
    Weiss, Jie W.
    Mouttapa, Michele
    Santos, Lola Sablan
    CANCER EPIDEMIOLOGY BIOMARKERS & PREVENTION, 2017, 26 (02)
  • [7] Randomized controlled trial of the getting to outcomes strategy's impact on implementation quality in community based settings
    Chinman, Matthew
    Acosta, Joie
    Ebener, Patricia
    Malone, Patrick
    Cannon, Jill
    IMPLEMENTATION SCIENCE, 2018, 13
  • [8] Randomized controlled trial of the getting to outcomes strategy's impact on implementation quality in community based settings
    Chinman, Matthew
    Acosta, Joie
    Ebener, Patricia
    Malone, Patrick
    Cannon, Jill
    IMPLEMENTATION SCIENCE, 2017, 13
  • [9] Using Getting To Outcomes to facilitate the use of an evidence-based practice in VA homeless programs: a cluster-randomized trial of an implementation support strategy
    Chinman, Matthew
    McCarthy, Sharon
    Hannah, Gordon
    Byrne, Thomas Hugh
    Smelson, David A.
    IMPLEMENTATION SCIENCE, 2017, 12
  • [10] Using Getting To Outcomes to facilitate the use of an evidence-based practice in VA homeless programs: a cluster-randomized trial of an implementation support strategy
    Matthew Chinman
    Sharon McCarthy
    Gordon Hannah
    Thomas Hugh Byrne
    David A. Smelson
    Implementation Science, 12