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Re: Data Needed: Proof of Prevention


Chronological Thread 
  • From: David Lee <>
  • To: Holly Rider-Milkovich <>
  • Cc: Jen Przewoznik <>, "Diaz, Sarah" <>, "" <>, "Bauman, Chad" <>
  • Subject: Re: Data Needed: Proof of Prevention
  • Date: Fri, 30 Jan 2015 07:26:49 -0800

We are in an evidence-build phase of the work - there are some interventions (as Kate referred to) that are being tested - and more studies will be coming soon.   (See Preventing Sexual Violence on College Campuses: Lessons from Research and Practice from the Not Alone report https://www.notalone.gov/assets/evidence-based-strategies-for-the-prevention-of-sv-perpetration.pdf)

This is the time to draw upon what lessons prevention practitioners are learning from their own prevention practice, time to ask critical questions, time to document what our work is doing,  and time to be creative in applying lessons learned from other prevention efforts in order to develop a more robust evidence based in sexual violence prevention.

As the hosts of the National Sexual Assault Conference to be held September 2-4, 2015 in Los Angeles, we are planning on a track dedicated to prevention in college communities. I strongly encourage you to submit proposals to share what work you are doing to prevent sexual violence.  The Call for Proposals can be found at http://www.calcasa.org/events/nsac/2015-national-sexual-assault-conference/

David

On Fri, Jan 30, 2015 at 7:05 AM, Holly Rider-Milkovich <> wrote:
Yes! We're measuring changes in knowledge and attitudes

Sent from my iPhone

On Jan 30, 2015, at 8:50 AM, Jen Przewoznik <> wrote:

Good morning all,

Yes to everything Holly said. I'll add that though we ultimately are seeking to change behavior, we right now able to, at the very least, map changes in knowledge, attitudes, and beliefs to the risk and protective factor research for SV perpetration. So, while the research is not entirely satisfying for us at this point, we can use good, high quality short and intermediate term program evaluation measures to make a case that changes in knowledge, attitudes, and beliefs in a population over time does correlate with what we know about mitigation of modifiable risk factors.

Hope this helps!
Best,
Jen

On Fri, Jan 30, 2015 at 7:54 AM, Holly Rider-Milkovich <> wrote:
Folks do tend to want a direct correlation between a training delivered and behavior change in the group who received the intervention but few of us have the ability yet to measure behavior change. Hopefully our climate surveys, repeated over time, will provide meaningful data on a whole population scale. Until that time, I usually offer our logic model that describes how we intend for our interventions to have impact on victimization and perpetration rates and then offer data on the effectiveness of those interventions as they're currently being measured. 

Sent from my iPhone

On Jan 29, 2015, at 10:22 PM, Diaz, Sarah <> wrote:

Colleagues,
When presented with the following question, what are the most impactful data sources you would share in response?   

"Is there even any evidence to prove that prevention efforts work to prevent sexual violence?" 

Thank you in advance for your helpful feedback!  

Respectfully, 
Sarah

P.S. Note I asked for what data sources you would share in response, though I'm sure there may be some other things we might all be inclined to say in response to this type of question... :)

Sarah B. Diaz, MSW
Coordinator for Health Education and Outreach Programs
 
Butler University
4600 Sunset Avenue
Indianapolis, IN 46208
 
Office: 317.940.8311
24 Hr. Victim Support: 317.910.5572
Fax: 317.940.6403

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    #BUBeWell 




--
Jen Przewoznik, MSW
Director of Prevention and Evaluation
North Carolina Coalition Against Sexual Assault
811 Spring Forest, Suite 900
Raleigh, NC 27609
919-871-1015 (p)
919-871-5895 (f)
www.nccasa.org

  
"It is unreasonable to expect that people will change their behavior easily when so many forces in the social, cultural, and physical environments conspire against such change."
                                                                           -Institutes of Medicine




--
David S. Lee, MPH
Director of Prevention Services
Manager, PreventConnect
California Coalition Against Sexual Assault (CALCASA)
1215 K Street Suite 1850
Sacramento, CA 95814
916-446-2520 x 309
916-254-5793 Fax


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 : Text Message (CALCASA Operator)

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