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Featured researches published by Anna G. Hoover.


American Journal of Preventive Medicine | 2013

Public Health Research Implementation and Translation: Evidence from Practice-Based Research Networks

Glen P. Mays; Rachel A. Hogg; Doris M. Castellanos-Cruz; Anna G. Hoover; Lizeth C. Fowler

BACKGROUND Research on how best to deliver efficacious public health strategies in heterogeneous community and organizational contexts remains limited. Such studies require the active engagement of public health practice settings in the design, implementation, and translation of research. Practice-based research networks (PBRNs) provide mechanisms for research engagement, but until now they have not been tested in public health settings. PURPOSE This study uses data from participants in 14 public health PBRNs and a national comparison group of public health agencies to study processes influencing the engagement of public health settings in research implementation and translation activities. METHODS A cross-sectional network analysis survey was fielded with participants in public health PBRNs approximately 1 year after network formation (n=357) and with a nationally representative comparison group of U.S. local health departments not participating in PBRNs (n=625). Hierarchic regression models were used to estimate how organizational attributes and PBRN network structures influence engagement in research implementation and translation activities. Data were collected in 2010-2012 and analyzed in 2012. RESULTS Among PBRN participants, both researchers and practice agencies reported high levels of engagement in research activities. Local public health agencies participating in PBRNs were two to three times more likely than nonparticipating agencies to engage in research implementation and translation activities (p<0.05). Participants in less densely connected PBRN networks and in more peripheral locations within these networks reported higher levels of research engagement, greater perceived benefits from engagement, and greater likelihood of continued participation. CONCLUSIONS PBRN networks can serve as effective mechanisms for facilitating research implementation and translation among public health practice settings.


SAGE Open | 2016

Applying Community-Based Participatory Research Partnership Principles to Public Health Practice-Based Research Networks

Nancy L. Winterbauer; Betty Bekemeier; Lisa VanRaemdonck; Anna G. Hoover

With real-world relevance and translatability as important goals, applied methodological approaches have arisen along the participatory continuum that value context and empower stakeholders to partner actively with academics throughout the research process. Community-based participatory research (CBPR) provides the gold standard for equitable, partnered research in traditional communities. Practice-based research networks (PBRNs) also have developed, coalescing communities of practice and of academics to identify, study, and answer practice-relevant questions. To optimize PBRN potential for expanding scientific knowledge, while bridging divides across knowledge production, dissemination, and implementation, we elucidate how PBRN partnerships can be strengthened by applying CBPR principles to build and maintain research collaboratives that empower practice partners. Examining the applicability of CBPR partnership principles to public health (PH) PBRNs, we conclude that PH-PBRNs can serve as authentic, sustainable CBPR partnerships, ensuring the co-production of new knowledge, while also improving and expanding the implementation and impact of research findings in real-world settings.


Health Communication | 2015

Designing for Dissemination: Lessons in Message Design From “1-2-3 Pap”

Elisia L. Cohen; Katharine J. Head; Margaret McGladrey; Anna G. Hoover; Robin C. Vanderpool; Colleen Bridger; Angela L. Carman; Richard A. Crosby; Elaine Darling; Nancy L. Winterbauer

Despite a large number of evidence-based health communication interventions tested in private, public, and community health settings, there is a dearth of research on successful secondary dissemination of these interventions to other audiences. This article presents the case study of “1-2-3 Pap,” a health communication intervention to improve human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination uptake and Pap testing outcomes in Eastern Kentucky, and explores strategies used to disseminate this intervention to other populations in Kentucky, North Carolina, and West Virginia. Through this dissemination project, we identified several health communication intervention design considerations that facilitated our successful dissemination to these other audiences; these intervention design considerations include (a) developing strategies for reaching other potential audiences, (b) identifying intervention message adaptations that might be needed, and (c) determining the most appropriate means or channels by which to reach these potential future audiences. Using “1-2-3 Pap” as an illustrative case study, we describe how careful planning and partnership development early in the intervention development process can improve the potential success of enhancing the reach and effectiveness of an intervention to other audiences beyond the audience for whom the intervention messages were originally designed.


Frontiers in Public Health | 2013

Commentary: Changing the Channel: Public Health Communication in the 21st Century

Anna G. Hoover

This commentary asserts the need for research examining the use and efficacy of social media as a tool for meeting public health stakeholders’ information needs. The author points to several potential research questions for the field, situates studies addressing these questions within the PHSSR Research Agenda, and introduces the work of Harris et al. that is included in this issue of Frontiers. The commentary closes with a call for horizontal stakeholder communication that supports evidence-based decision-making.


American Journal of Preventive Medicine | 2013

Engaging Public Health Settings in Research Implementation and Translation Activities: Evidence from Practice-Based Research Networks

Glen P. Mays; Rachel A. Hogg; Doris M. Castellanos-Cruz; Anna G. Hoover; Lizeth C. Fowler

BACKGROUND Research on how best to deliver efficacious public health strategies in heterogeneous community and organizational contexts remains limited. Such studies require the active engagement of public health practice settings in the design, implementation, and translation of research. Practice-based research networks (PBRNs) provide mechanisms for research engagement, but until now they have not been tested in public health settings. PURPOSE This study uses data from participants in 14 public health PBRNs and a national comparison group of public health agencies to study processes influencing the engagement of public health settings in research implementation and translation activities. METHODS A cross-sectional network analysis survey was fielded with participants in public health PBRNs approximately 1 year after network formation (n=357) and with a nationally representative comparison group of U.S. local health departments not participating in PBRNs (n=625). Hierarchic regression models were used to estimate how organizational attributes and PBRN network structures influence engagement in research implementation and translation activities. Data were collected in 2010-2012 and analyzed in 2012. RESULTS Among PBRN participants, both researchers and practice agencies reported high levels of engagement in research activities. Local public health agencies participating in PBRNs were two to three times more likely than nonparticipating agencies to engage in research implementation and translation activities (p<0.05). Participants in less densely connected PBRN networks and in more peripheral locations within these networks reported higher levels of research engagement, greater perceived benefits from engagement, and greater likelihood of continued participation. CONCLUSIONS PBRN networks can serve as effective mechanisms for facilitating research implementation and translation among public health practice settings.


American Journal of Preventive Medicine | 2013

Public Health Research Implementation and Translation

Glen P. Mays; Rachel A. Hogg; Doris M. Castellanos-Cruz; Anna G. Hoover; Lizeth C. Fowler

BACKGROUND Research on how best to deliver efficacious public health strategies in heterogeneous community and organizational contexts remains limited. Such studies require the active engagement of public health practice settings in the design, implementation, and translation of research. Practice-based research networks (PBRNs) provide mechanisms for research engagement, but until now they have not been tested in public health settings. PURPOSE This study uses data from participants in 14 public health PBRNs and a national comparison group of public health agencies to study processes influencing the engagement of public health settings in research implementation and translation activities. METHODS A cross-sectional network analysis survey was fielded with participants in public health PBRNs approximately 1 year after network formation (n=357) and with a nationally representative comparison group of U.S. local health departments not participating in PBRNs (n=625). Hierarchic regression models were used to estimate how organizational attributes and PBRN network structures influence engagement in research implementation and translation activities. Data were collected in 2010-2012 and analyzed in 2012. RESULTS Among PBRN participants, both researchers and practice agencies reported high levels of engagement in research activities. Local public health agencies participating in PBRNs were two to three times more likely than nonparticipating agencies to engage in research implementation and translation activities (p<0.05). Participants in less densely connected PBRN networks and in more peripheral locations within these networks reported higher levels of research engagement, greater perceived benefits from engagement, and greater likelihood of continued participation. CONCLUSIONS PBRN networks can serve as effective mechanisms for facilitating research implementation and translation among public health practice settings.


World Environmental and Water Resources Congress 2011 | 2011

Stakeholder Future Vision Process for the Paducah Gaseous Diffusion Plant

Lindell Ormsbee; Anna G. Hoover

In 2009, the United States Department of Energy (US DOE) asked the University of Kentucky-affiliated Kentucky Research Consortium for Energy and the Environment (KRCEE) to develop a community-based end state vision, encompassing the range of community perspectives and preferences for future land use at the Paducah Gaseous Diffusion Plant site in west Kentucky. This paper provides an overview of the four-step methodology developed and implemented in this process, as well as lessons learned in interfacing with a diverse set of stakeholders.


Archive | 2014

Connecting Disciplines to Inform and Develop the Emerging Field of Environmental Health Literacy

Anna G. Hoover


Archive | 2013

COMMUNICATION AT SUPERFUND SITES AND THE REIFICATION OF DIVISION: TOWARD A CONVERGENCE-BUILDING MODEL OF RISK COMMUNICATION

Anna G. Hoover


American Journal of Preventive Medicine | 2015

Organizational Variation in Implementation of an Evidence-Based Human Papillomavirus Intervention

Angela L. Carman; Margaret L. McGladrey; Anna G. Hoover; Richard A. Crosby

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