2014
DOI: 10.5888/pcd11.130184
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The Program Sustainability Assessment Tool: A New Instrument for Public Health Programs

Abstract: IntroductionPublic health programs can deliver benefits only if they are able to sustain programs, policies, and activities over time. Although numerous sustainability frameworks and models have been developed, there are almost no assessment tools that have demonstrated reliability or validity or have been widely disseminated. We present the Program Sustainability Assessment Tool (PSAT), a new and reliable instrument for assessing the capacity for program sustainability of various public health and other progr… Show more

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Cited by 230 publications
(251 citation statements)
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“…Therefore, there is not a single measure of sustainability for this project that answers the question, “Was it sustained?” This means that predictors or influences on sustainability are also likely to differ among the different outcomes, further complicating research about factors influencing sustainability in practice. For example, to use the Program Sustainability Assessment Tool developed by Luke and colleagues [6], one would need to specify which specific sustainability outcome is being assessed, as the influencers for individual participant retention, for example, are likely to differ from influencers for church-level activity continuation or for maintenance of partnerships among organizations. In essence, it is not desirable to view sustainability as a single outcome, given the diversity of meanings and measures shown by Project HEAL.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Therefore, there is not a single measure of sustainability for this project that answers the question, “Was it sustained?” This means that predictors or influences on sustainability are also likely to differ among the different outcomes, further complicating research about factors influencing sustainability in practice. For example, to use the Program Sustainability Assessment Tool developed by Luke and colleagues [6], one would need to specify which specific sustainability outcome is being assessed, as the influencers for individual participant retention, for example, are likely to differ from influencers for church-level activity continuation or for maintenance of partnerships among organizations. In essence, it is not desirable to view sustainability as a single outcome, given the diversity of meanings and measures shown by Project HEAL.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Interest and research about the long-term sustainability of health-related interventions is growing but often has not operationalized the term “sustainability” as a set of multiple outcomes [3, 5, 6, 810]. Researchers, funders, policy-makers, and community practitioners are concerned whether their interventions continue after an initial research project or grant [1, 1113].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…These kinds of questions need to be addressed in order to create a valid and reliable model to measure sustainability in healthcare systems. First steps in the direction of sustainability assessment can be observed on a smaller level, one of which is the Program Sustainability Assessment Tool developed by Luke et al [60]. The program was developed after transferring the results of a literature review [61] into a questionnaire that serves as an assessment tool to rate the sustainability of public health programs.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some agencies used an online sustainability tool to assess their readiness to sustain the new practice and identify priorities on which to focus (Luke, Calhoun, Robichaux, Elliott, & Moreland-Russell, 2014). The final phase included a knowledge mobilization session where agencies shared their activities, tools, experiences, and lessons learned.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%