Research Involvement and Engagement (Sep 2024)

Using mixed methods and partnership to develop a program evaluation toolkit for organizations that provide physical activity programs for persons with disabilities

  • Sarah V. C. Lawrason,
  • Pinder DaSilva,
  • Emilie Michalovic,
  • Amy Latimer-Cheung,
  • Jennifer R. Tomasone,
  • Shane Sweet,
  • Tanya Forneris,
  • Jennifer Leo,
  • Matthew Greenwood,
  • Janine Giles,
  • Jane Arkell,
  • Jackie Patatas,
  • Nick Boyle,
  • Nathan Adams,
  • Kathleen A. Martin Ginis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40900-024-00618-7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 1
pp. 1 – 18

Abstract

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Abstract Background The purpose of this paper is to report on the process for developing an online RE-AIM evaluation toolkit in partnership with organizations that provide physical activity programming for persons with disabilities. Methods A community-university partnership was established and guided by an integrated knowledge translation approach. The four-step development process included: (1) identify, review, and select knowledge (literature review and two rounds of Delphi consensus-building), (2) adapt knowledge to local context (rating feasibility of outcomes and integration into online platform), (3) assess barriers and facilitators (think-aloud interviews), and (4) select, tailor, implement (collaborative dissemination plan). Results Step 1: Fifteen RE-AIM papers relevant to community programming were identified during the literature review. Two rounds of Delphi refined indicators for the toolkit related to reach, effectiveness, adoption, implementation, and maintenance. Step 2: At least one measure was linked with each indicator. Ten research and community partners participated in assessing the feasibility of measures, resulting in a total of 85 measures. Step 3: Interviews resulted in several recommendations for the online platform and toolkit. Step 4: Project partners developed a dissemination plan, including an information package, webinars, and publications. Discussion This project demonstrates that community and university partners can collaborate to develop a useful, evidence-informed evaluation resource for both audiences. We identified several strategies for partnership when creating a toolkit, including using a set of expectations, engaging research users from the outset, using consensus methods, recruiting users through networks, and mentorship of trainees. The toolkit can be found at et.cdpp.ca. Next steps include disseminating (e.g., through webinars, conferences) and evaluating the toolkit to improve its use for diverse contexts (e.g., universal PA programming).

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