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Table 2 Interviewee organization characteristics by implementation reach

From: Inner and outer setting factors that influence the implementation of the National Diabetes Prevention Program (National DPP) using the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR): a qualitative study

 

Implementation reach

 

Implementation level based on reach calculated as the average number of participants enrolled per year

Low

5–16/year

Med

17–35/year

High

36–150/year

Total (%)

Number of interviewees

9

10

11

30

Organization type (n)

 Healthcare/hospitals

3

4

2

9 (30%)

 Community-based healthcare

2

1

2

5 (17%)

 Community-based organizations

-

2

3

5 (17%)

 Government agencies

3

1

1

5 (17%)

 Other: health insurers, employers, academia

1

2

2

6 (20%)

Years delivering the National DPP (n)

 0–2 years: initial delivery phase

6

5

2

13 (43%)

 3–4 years: intermediate delivery phase

2

5

6

13 (43%)

 5 + years: long-term delivery phase

1

-

3

4 (13%)

Organization size (n)

 0–1000 people served annually across all services and programs

1

3

1

5 (17%)

 1001–10,000 people

4

5

2

11 (37%)

 10,001–100,000 people

4

1

2

7 (23%)

 Over 100,000 people

-

1

5

6 (20%)

Missing

  

1

1 (3%)

CDC DPRP recognition statusa (n)

 Pending/preliminary

7

8

5

20 (67%)

 Fully recognized

2

2

6

10 (33%)

Geographic region in the USA (n)

 Northeast

3

1

2

6 (20%)

 Southeast

3

4

3

10 (33%)

 Midwest

-

1

3

4 (13%)

 Southwest

3

2

1

6 (20%)

 West

-

1

2

3 (10%)

 Other (US territories)

-

1

-

1 (3%)

Populations served (n)

 White/Caucasian

7

8

9

24 (80%)

 Black/African-American

7

5

9

21 (70%)

 Hispanic/Latino

7

4

8

19 (63%)

 Alaska Native/American Indian

3

-

5

8 (27%)

 Pacific Islander/Asian

2

2

4

8 (27%)

  1. aFor more details on CDC’s DPRP recognition status requirements see https://www.cdc.gov/diabetes/prevention/requirements-recognition.htm