Virtual Briefing: “Building Sustainable Infrastructure to Implement Programs that Promote Healthy Development and Prevent Behavioral and Mental Health Problems”

Wednesday, March 27, 2024
2:30 pm
- 3:30 pm (ET)

Home » Events » Virtual Briefing: “Building Sustainable Infrastructure to Implement Programs that Promote Healthy Development and Prevent Behavioral and Mental Health Problems”

Edna Bennett Pierce Prevention Center - Advancing Prevention Science Newsletter Sign Up
Loading Events
  • This event has passed.

The scope and magnitude of challenges facing youth and their families in the United States demand effective solutions. Scientific evidence is a critical tool for revealing what works, in what settings, and for which individuals and communities. Evidence can protect taxpayer interests by informing decision-makers about where best to invest public dollars to create opportunities by ensuring people who need help can get it, and driving faster progress, thereby expanding the impact of public dollars to improve lives. The opportunities for this process to play out can be particularly impactful with the application of evidence amassed in the field of prevention science, which direct us to well-tested strategies shown to interrupt pathways to negative outcomes and improve behavioral health and well-being among our youth.

This briefing will feature speakers who will present a blueprint, including specific actionable steps for building and sustaining an infrastructure for delivering effective preventive interventions to promote healthy outcomes in our youth. Integral to such an infrastructure is the availability and utility of registries that have established, based on rigorous research, programs that meet standards for a designation as “evidence-based,” assisting states and local governments in determining how best to invest precious resources. It will also identify funding needs and strategies to support the infrastructure; present results of cost-benefit analyses of prevention programming establishing their return on investment; discuss barriers to widespread program implementation; and recommend state-level policies to support the financing and infrastructure (including workforce development and data interoperability) for promoting behavioral health.

Moderator: Diana Fishbein, Ph.D. is the founder and co-director of NPSC, Senior Research Scientist, Frank Porter Graham Child Development Institute, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, and part-time faculty at Penn State University.

Details

Date:
Wednesday, March 27, 2024
Time:
2:30 pm - 3:30 pm
Go to Top