Sustainability of State-Level Substance Abuse Prevention Infrastructure After the Completion of the SPF SIG

The Journal of Primary Prevention
Jessica M EdwardsLei Zhang

Abstract

Recent national substance abuse prevention efforts that have been disseminated at the state level have provided fertile ground for addressing the dearth of systematic research on state-level substance abuse prevention infrastructure. The Strategic Prevention Framework State Incentive Grant Program (SPF SIG), a national public health initiative sponsored by the US Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration and its Center for Substance Abuse Prevention, is one such effort, providing an opportunity to examine state-level substance abuse prevention infrastructure across the country. The aims of the SPF SIG initiative include reducing substance abuse and its related problems, as well as enhancing state and local prevention infrastructure and capacity. In this article, we describe the status of state-level substance abuse prevention infrastructure and capacity 1 year after the first 26 funded states ended their projects, based on follow-up interviews with state prevention decision-makers. We found that, in five of the six prevention domains we measured, prevention infrastructure capacity increased during the 12-month period after the grants ended. The evidence for further SPF capacity development even after the conclus...Continue Reading

References

Sep 16, 2003·The American Psychologist·Abraham Wandersman, Paul Florin
May 25, 2005·American Journal of Community Psychology·Matthew ChinmanJeffrey Sheldon

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Citations

Jul 10, 2016·Prevention Science : the Official Journal of the Society for Prevention Research·Robert L Flewelling, Sean M Hanley
Apr 12, 2017·Prevention Science : the Official Journal of the Society for Prevention Research·Knowlton JohnsonAbraham Wandersman
Sep 10, 2017·The Journal of Primary Prevention·Robert ApslerColleen Carr
Jul 19, 2018·Ciência & saúde coletiva·Thaísa Borges Gomes, Marcelo Dalla Vecchia
Jan 13, 2021·Substance Abuse Treatment, Prevention, and Policy·Parissa J BallardMark Wolfson

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