Research ArticleSpecial Communications
RE-AIMing Research for Application: Ways to Improve Evidence for Family Medicine
Russell E. Glasgow
The Journal of the American Board of Family
Medicine January 2006, 19 (1) 11-19; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3122/jabfm.19.1.11

References
- ↵Institute of Medicine. Primary care: America’s health in a new era. Washington (DC): National Academy of Sciences; 1996.
- ↵Starfield B. Primary care: balancing health needs, services, and technology. Oxford University Press; 1998.
- ↵Flay BR. Efficacy and effectiveness trials (and other phases of research) in the development of health promotion programs. Prev Med 1986; 15: 451–74.
- ↵Glasgow RE, Lichtenstein E, Marcus AC. Why don’t we see more translation of health promotion research to practice? Rethinking the efficacy to effectiveness transition. Am J Public Health 2003; 93: 1261–7.
- ↵McGlynn EA, Asch SM, Adams J, Keesey J, Hicks J, DeCristofaro A, Kerr EA. The quality of health care delivered to adults in the United States. N Engl J Med 2003; 348: 2635–45.
- ↵Institute of Medicine, Committee on Quality of Health Care in America. Crossing the quality chasm: a new health system for the 21st Century. Washington (DC): National Academy Press; 2001.
- ↵Zerhouni E. Medicine. The NIH Road Map. Science 2003; 302: 63–72.
- Finney JW, Willenbring ML, Moos RH. Improving the quality of VA care for patients with substance-use disorders: the Quality Enhancement Research Initiative (QUERI). Med Care 2000; 38(6 Suppl): 1105–13.
- Farquhar CM, Stryer D, Slutsky J. Translating research into practice: the future ahead. Int J Qual Health Care 2002; 14: 233–49.
- ↵Green LW, Ottosen JM. From efficacy to effectiveness to community and back: evidence-based practice vs. practice-based evidence. Proceedings from conference: From Clinical Trials to Community: The Science of Translating Diabetes and Obesity Research: National Institutes of Diabetes, Digestive and Kidney Diseases; 2004.
- ↵Tunis SR, Stryer DB, Clancey CM. Practical clinical trials. Increasing the value of clinical research for decision-making in clinical and health policy. JAMA 2003; 290: 1624–32.
- ↵Nutting PA, Beasley JW, Werner JJ. Practice-based research networks answer primary care questions. JAMA 1999; 281: 686–9.
- ↵Glasgow RE, Davidson KW, Dobkin PL, Ockene J, Spring B. Practical behavioral trials to advance evidence-based behavioral medicine. Ann Behav Med In press 2006.
- ↵Glasgow RE, Magid DJ, Beck A, Ritzwoller D, Estabrooks PA. Practical clinical trials for translating research to practice: design and measurement recommendations. Med Care 2005; 43: 551–7.
- ↵Glasgow RE. Translating research to practice: lessons learned, areas for improvement, and future directions. Diabetes Care 2003; 26: 2451–6.
- ↵Cronbach LH, Glesser GC, Nanda H, Rajaratnam N. The dependability of behavioral measurements: theory of generalizability for scores and profiles. New York: John Wiley & Sons; 1972.
- ↵Shadish WR, Cook TD, Campbell DT. Experimental and quasi-experimental design for generalized causal inference. Boston: Houghton Mifflin; 2002.
- ↵Kaplan RM. Need for continuing cost-effectiveness and cost utility studies in diabetes care. Diabetes Spectrum 1995; 8: 252–3.
- ↵Gold MR, Siegel JE, Russell LB, Weinstein MC. Cost-effectiveness in health and medicine. New York: Oxford University Press; 2003.
- ↵Meenan RT, Stevens VJ, Hornbrook MC, La Chance PA, Glasgow RE, Hollis JF, et al. Cost-effectiveness of a hospital-based smoking cessation intervention. Med Care 1998; 36: 670–8.
- ↵Bennett-Johnson S. Behavioral aspects of diabetes. In: Byrne DG, Caddy GR, Editors. Behavioral medicine. Norwood: Ablex Publishing Corporation; 1992. p. 317–52.
- ↵Craig CL, Marshall AL, Sjostrom M, et al. International physical activity questionnaire: 12-country reliability and validity. Med Sci Sports Exerc 2003; 35: 1381–95.
- ↵Glasgow RE, Ory MG, Klesges LM, Cifuentes M, Fernald DH, Green LA. Practical and relevant measures of health behavior for primary care settings. Ann Fam Med 2005; 3: 73–81.
- Lorig K, Stewart A, Ritter P, Gonzalez V, Laurent D, Lynch J. Outcome measures for health education and other health care interventions. Thousand Oaks (CA): Sage Publications; 1996.
- ↵Kaplan RM. The significance of quality of life in health care. Qual Life Res 2003; 12(Suppl 1): 3–16.
- ↵Lorig KR, Sobel DS, Stewart AL, et al. Evidence suggesting that a chronic disease self-management program can improve health status while reducing hospitalization: a randomized trial. Med Care 1999; 37: 5–14.
- ↵Bech P, Olsen LR, Kjoller M, Rasmussen NK. Measuring well-being rather than the absence of distress symptoms: a comparison of the SF-36 mental health subscale and the WHO–Five Well-Being Scale. Int J Methods Psychiatr Res 2003; 12: 85–91.
- ↵Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. CDC Healthy Days Website. Available at: http://www.cdc.gov/hrqol/monograph.htm 2005.
- ↵Leape LL, Berwick DM. Five years after To Err is Human: What have we learned? JAMA 2005; 18: 2384–90.
- ↵Stange KC, Woolf SH, Gjeltema K. One minute for prevention: the power of leveraging to fulfill the promise of health behavior counseling. Am J Prev Med 2002; 22: 320–3.
- ↵Goldstein MG, Whitlock EP, DePue J. Multiple health risk behavior interventions in primary care: summary of research evidence. Am J Prev Med 2004; 27(2 Suppl): 61–79.
- ↵National Committee for Quality Assurance (NCQA). Health plan employer data and information set 3.0. Washington (DC): National Committee for Quality Assurance; 1996.
- ↵Green LW, Kreuter MW. Health promotion planning: an educational and ecological approach. 4th Ed. Mountain View (CA): Mayfield Publishing Company; 2005.
- Rotheram-Borus MJ, Flannery ND. Interventions that are CURRES: Cost-effective, useful, realistic, robust, evolving, and sustainable. In: Rehmschmidt H, Belfer M, Goodyear I, et al, Editors. Facilitating pathways: care, treatment, and prevention in child and adolescent health. New York: Springer; 2004. p. 235–44.
- ↵Rogers EM. Diffusion of innovations. 5th Ed. New York: Free Press; 2003.
- ↵Glasgow RE, Vogt TM, Boles SM. Evaluating the public health impact of health promotion interventions: the RE-AIM framework. Am J Public Health 1999; 89: 1322–7.
- ↵Glasgow RE. Evaluation of theory-based interventions: the RE-AIM model. In: Glanz K, Lewis FM, Rimer BK, editors. Health behavior and health education. 3rd Ed. San Francisco: John Wiley & Sons; 2002. p. 531–44.
- ↵Glasgow RE, McKay HG, Piette JD, Reynolds KD. The RE-AIM framework for evaluating interventions: what can it tell us about approaches to chronic illness management? Patient Educ Couns 2001; 44: 119–27.
- ↵Prochaska JO, Velicer WF, Fava JL, Rossi JS, Tsoh JY. Evaluating a population-based recruitment approach and a stage-based expert system intervention for smoking cessation. Add Behav 2001; 26: 583–602.
- ↵Abrams DB, Orleans CT, Niaura RS, Goldstein MG, Prochaska JO, Velicer W. Integrating individual and public health perspectives for treatment of tobacco dependence under managed health care: a combined stepped care and matching model. Ann Behav Med 1996; 18: 290–304.
- ↵Glasgow RE, Klesges LM, Dzewaltowski DA, Estabrooks PA, Vogt TM. Evaluating the overall impact of health promotion programs: using the RE-AIM framework for decision making and to consider complex issues. Health Educ Res In press 2006.
- ↵Institute of Medicine. Unequal treatment: confronting racial and ethnic disparities in health care. Washington (DC): National Academies Press; 2003.
- ↵Glasgow RE, Klesges LM, Dzewaltowski DA, Bull SS, Estabrooks P. The future of health behavior change research: what is needed to improve translation of research into health promotion practice? Ann Behav Med 2004; 27: 3–12.
- ↵Rothman KJ, Greenland S, editors. Modern epidemiology. 2nd Ed. Philadelphia PA: Lippincott, Williams, and Wilkins; 1998.
- ↵Glasgow RE, Whitlock EP, Eakin EG, Lichtenstein E. A brief smoking cessation intervention for women in low-income Planned Parenthood Clinics. Am J Public Health 2000; 90: 786–9.
- ↵Glasgow RE, Nutting PA, King DK, et al. A practical randomized trial to improve diabetes care. J Gen Intern Med 2004; 19: 1167–74.
- ↵Will JC, Farris RP, Sanders CG, Stockmyer CK, Finkelstein EA. Health promotion interventions for disadvantaged women: overview of the WISEWOMAN projects. J Womens Health 2004; 13: 484–502.
- ↵Crabtree BF, Miller WL, Stange KC. Understanding practice from the ground up. J Fam Pract 2001; 50: 881–7.
- Stange KC, Goodwin MR, Zyzanski SJ, Dietrich AJ. Sustainability of a practice-individualized preventive service delivery intervention. Am J Prev Med 2003; 25: 296–300.
- Miller WL, McDaniel RRJ, Crabtree BF, Stange KC. Practice jazz: understanding variation in family practices using complexity science. J Fam Pract 2001; 50: 872–8.
- ↵Glasgow RE, Bull SS, Piette JD, Steiner J. Interactive behavior change technology: a partial solution to the competing demands of primary care. Am J Prev Med 2004; 27: 80–7.
- ↵
- ↵Riley KM, Glasgow RE, Eakin EG. Resources for health: a social-ecological intervention for supporting self-management of chronic conditions. J Health Psychol 2001; 6: 693–705.
In this issue
The Journal of the American Board of Family
Medicine
Vol. 19, Issue 1
January-February 2006
RE-AIMing Research for Application: Ways to Improve Evidence for Family Medicine
Russell E. Glasgow
The Journal of the American Board of Family
Medicine Jan 2006, 19 (1) 11-19; DOI: 10.3122/jabfm.19.1.11
Related Articles
- No related articles found.
Cited By...
- Improving uptake of colorectal cancer screening by complex patients at an academic primary care practice: a feasibility study
- Advance Care Planning Meets Group Medical Visits: The Feasibility of Promoting Conversations
- Peer Support for Diabetes Management in Primary Care and Community Settings in Anhui Province, China
- Type 2 Translational Research for CKD
- Peer Support For Self-Management Of Diabetes Improved Outcomes In International Settings