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Society
for Prevention Research
Call
for Papers 16th Annual Meeting
"Context
and Prevention Science"
Hyatt
Regency San Francisco Embarcadero
Center
May 28 – May 30, 2008
Pre-conference Workshops May
27, 2008
The
Program Committee of the Society
for Prevention Research (SPR)
invites submissions for presentations
within all content areas of
public health, education, human
services, criminal justice,
and medical science. Relevant
focus areas include, but are
not limited to: health disparities,
health promotion and disease
prevention, maternal health,
suicide, infant and child health,
mental health/mental disorders,
family conflict, substance abuse
and addiction (alcohol, tobacco,
illicit drugs), violence, delinquency,
crime, academic failure, dropping-out
of school, child maltreatment,
obesity, cardiovascular disease,
cancer, diabetes mellitus, HIV/AIDS
and other sexually transmitted
disease, unintended pregnancy,
unemployment, occupation safety,
auto crashes, unintended injury,
poverty, welfare, managed care,
and policy-based interventions.
The
theme for the 2008 conference
is “Context and Prevention
Science”. While most agree
that “context matters”,
relatively little research in
prevention science has been
conducted that aids understanding
of the ways in which context
matters in designing interventions
and understanding intervention
impact. In addition, as the
science moves forward to better
understand gene and environment
interactions in development,
it is clear that many questions
about environment remain –
questions of definition, processes,
intervention targets, measurement
and a myriad of methodological
challenges. As outlined below,
submissions that include a focus
on context across all areas
of prevention science from epidemiology
to dissemination research are
strongly encouraged. Submissions
for presentations may include
individual paper and poster
presentations, organized paper
symposia, poster forums, round-table
discussions/scientific dialogue
sessions, and technology demonstrations.
Special
Themes
Context
and Prevention. SPR
strongly encourages submissions
focused on understanding the
role of social and physical
settings – such as families,
peer groups, schools, and neighborhoods
– as contexts for both
development and settings of
interventions. For example,
there has been limited investigation
of the relation of neighborhood
context to preventive intervention
outcomes, despite increasing
empirical evidence documenting
community and neighborhood characteristics’
relation to psychosocial and
health outcomes both directly
and through the interaction
with other social settings.
Characteristics of neighborhood
and community contexts may be
important in both intervention
content and understanding variation
in intervention impact. Submissions
that focus on the physical or
structural characteristics and
social processes within settings
as related to the development
of interventions and in modifying
intervention impact, the interaction
between settings, as well as
multilevel measurement and analytic
methods appropriate for such
analyses are all strongly encouraged.
Submissions focused on larger
social, political, cultural
or economic contexts are also
encouraged.
Research,
Policy and Practice. Researchers
often complain about the lack
of attention to research findings
to guide policy and decision
making. Policymakers often complain
that researchers address topics
that are not policy-relevant,
produce ambiguous or conflicting
findings or report findings
in ways that are inaccessible
to policymakers. Both groups
suggest that high-quality research
could and should be used to
inform and shape policies and
practices. Submissions presenting
research on how and under what
conditions research is used
to influence policies and practices
or how policy priorities shape
what researchers study are encouraged.
The
Role of Culture, Ethnicity and
Health Disparities in Prevention
Research. SPR
continues to focus on better
understanding issues related
to health disparities. Submissions
are encouraged that articulate
how prevention science can address
several key factors: biological,
behavioral, social environment,
physical environment, and policies\
to reduce health disparities
and to promote health and well-being.
Emerging
Adulthood.
Each year, SPR focuses
on a different stage of development.
The 2008 conference invites
special attention to the developmental
period of emerging adulthood,
which extends roughly through
the ages 18 to 29. Recent research
has identified this period of
development as distinct from
both adolescence and young adulthood
and a period of time often characterized
by instability and identity
exploration. This developmental
stage provides a unique opportunity
for intervention, as individuals
move toward young adulthood
and responsibilities of work,
partnered relationships and
parenthood. Developing a better
understanding of interventions
to prevent problem behaviors,
the mechanisms of such preventive
interventions, and promote positive
development, as well as gaining
better insight into this developmental
period would be of substantial
value for the field.
Advances
across the Stages of the Prevention
Research Cycle
Epidemiology
Knowing the prevalence of specific
problems or disorders, the distribution
of risk factors in the population,
shifts in risk factors and the
distribution of problems over
time are critical prerequisites
to designing effective prevention
programs. An emphasis on basic
behavioral science and epidemiology
will remain the basis of strong
intervention and prevention
programs. Epidemiological studies
typically reflect phase 1 and
2 trials in a biomedical model
of intervention development.
Special Interest Areas:
• The use of community
monitoring systems to affect
behavioral changes in settings
• Variations by community,
socioeconomic status, race and
ethnicity
Etiology
Prevention science includes
research that has a high probability
of yielding results that will
likely be applicable to disease
prevention. Basic research efforts
generate knowledge that contributes
to the development of future
preventive efforts. Etiological
studies typically reflect Phase
1 trials in a biomedical model.
Special Interest Area:
• Interactions among genetic,
environmental and developmental
factors in the etiology of problem
behaviors (e.g., substance use,
aggression), obesity, and other
health problems.
Efficacy
Trials
Efficacy trials demonstrate
the “proof of concept”
with a specified population
under conditions of high quality
assurance and strong research
designs (typically randomized
controlled designs). Efficacy
trials answer the basic question
of whether there are benefits
from a proposed innovation.
In a biomedical model of intervention
development, these are Phase
3 trials.
Special Interest Areas:
• Outcomes most relevant
to the developmental concerns
of emerging adulthood including,
HIV, substance use, child maltreatment,
obesity, suicide, violence,
partner violence
Effectiveness
Trials
The true test of a prevention
program is the effectiveness
in the real-life setting with
the community in charge of the
program. Effectiveness trials
involve replicating an efficacious
intervention under real world
conditions in community settings.
There is less quality assurance
on an ongoing basis and the
outcomes demonstrate the likely
impact of an intervention when
delivered without the original
research team. In a biomedical
model, these are Phase 4 trials.
Special Interest Area:
• Studies that evaluate
variation in preventive intervention
impact by population or setting
characteristics.
Dissemination
Careful trials to assess which
programs would be particularly
well suited for dissemination,
which individuals would be most
likely to benefit, and which
disorders are prevented are
important steps in program development.
Dissemination research identifies
strategies for taking interventions
to scale and identifies potential
barriers to dissemination.
Special Interest
Areas:
• Type II translational
research, including effectiveness
and dissemination research directed
toward scaling up efficacious
interventions
• Examples of effective
strategies for the advocacy
and promotion of evidence-based
programs and policies at the
federal, state and local levels.
Innovative
Methods
Prevention science owes much
of its progress to the development
of new measures, designs, and
statistical analyses. Continued
contributions to the development
of innovations in prevention
science methods are vital to
our progress. For example, mixed-methods
approaches that integrate qualitative
and quantitative methodologies
within a unified research design
may offer more informative research
results, although this approach
still lacks robustness and scientific
rigor. “Cutting edge”
studies and methodological analyses
are welcomed that address measurement,
statistical, methodological
and practical challenges to
prevention science, as well
as the benefits offered by various
innovative methods.
Special Interest
Areas:
• Integrating qualitative
and quantitative methods.
• Analysis of multi-level
data from community studies.
• Issues modeling cross-level
interactions in community-based
studies.
• Translating cutting-edge
analytic methods into approaches
that are accessible to both
researchers and consumers of
prevention science.
All
abstracts are submitted on-line
at www.preventionresearch.org
The
abstract site will open Wednesday,
September 5, 2007
Deadline
for Submission: Monday,
October 29, 2007
Acceptance decisions are expected
early March 2008.
Society
for Prevention Research
11240 Waples Mill Road, Ste
200
Fairfax, VA 22030
703-934-4850, 703-359-7562 fax
info@preventionresearch.org
www.preventionresearch.org
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