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May 2024 Test

An Evidence-Based Practice

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Description

The one created to test Regression tests

Goal / Mission

B

Impact

D

Results / Accomplishments

C

About this Promising Practice

Organization(s)
HCI
Primary Contact
Fake Contact
123 Fake St.
123-456-7890
communityguide@cdc.gov
http://www.google.com
Topics
Health / Mental Health & Mental Disorders
Organization(s)
HCI
Source
Conduent
For more details
http://www.google.com

Related Promising Practices

  1. Multimodal Substance Abuse Prevention
  2. Orange County Juvenile Substance Abuse Treatment Court
  3. Urban Women Against Substance Abuse
  4. Baltimore Needle Exchange Program
  5. Behavioral Couples Therapy for Alcoholism and Drug Abuse (BCT)
  6. Communities That Care

More

Related Content for: May 2024 Test

Indicators MORE Indicators links

  • Adults who Binge Drink
  • Age-Adjusted Drug and Opioid-Involved Overdose Death Rate
  • Death Rate due to Drug Poisoning
  • Adults Ever Diagnosed with Depression
  • Mental Health Provider Rate

An Evidence-Based Practice meets the following HCI criteria:

  1. The program description includes at a minimum: the sponsoring organization, program goals, program implementation steps, and outcomes that have demonstrated program success in achieving the program goal in one or more localities.
  2. The results from an evaluation of the program include quantitative measures showing improvement in the outcome(s) of interest after the implementation of the program (i.e. increase in smoking cessation, not just the delivery of a smoking cessation program). The outcome measure(s) is/are compared at relevant time periods before and after the intervention or program implementation. Alternatively, the evaluation study compares the outcome(s) between an intervention group and an appropriate control group.
  3. The study is of peer-review quality and presents numbers in a scientific manner; measurements of precision and reliability are included (e.g. confidence intervals, standard errors), results from statistical tests show a significant difference or change in the outcome measure(s), and relevant point estimates and p-values are presented. Note: if the results from an evaluation of a program are presented in a scientific manner and the outcome measure is improved compared to the baseline measurement or the control group but the difference is not statistically significant, the practice is classified as effective and not evidence-based.
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Barnes-Jewish St. Peter's Hospital