Publications by authors named "Chayna J Davis"

Background: The Evidence-Based Practice Attitudes Scale (EBPAS) is widely used in implementation research, but it has not been adapted and validated for use among general education teachers, who are most likely to deliver evidence-based prevention programs in schools, the most common setting where youth access social, emotional, and behavioral health services.

Method: School-based stakeholders and a research team comprised of experts in the implementation of evidence-based practices in schools adapted the EBPAS for teachers (the S-EBPAS). The adapted instrument was administered to a representative sample ( = 441) of general education teachers (grades K-5) to assess the reliability and internal consistency via factor analyses.

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Background: Strategies to implement evidence-based interventions (EBIs) in children's mental health services have complex direct and indirect causal impacts on multiple outcomes. Ripple effects are outcomes caused by EBI implementation efforts that are unplanned, unanticipated, and/or more salient to stakeholders other than researchers and implementers. The purpose of the current paper is to provide a compilation of possible ripple effects associated with EBI implementation strategies in children's mental health services, to be used for implementation planning, research, and quality improvement.

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Research has produced a steady stream of evidence-based practices (EBP) that can promote youth behavioral health, but widespread implementation is often poor. To narrow the "science to practice gap," an implementation strategy was developed to enhance school-based mental health providers' intentions to implement EBP. The current study adopted a user-testing approach to inform the iterative development of this implementation strategy, which consisted of strategic education, social influence techniques, and motivational interviewing.

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Body mass index (BMI), a simple anthropometric measure, is the most frequently used measure of adiposity and has been instrumental in documenting the worldwide increase in the prevalence of obesity witnessed during the last decades. Although this increase in overweight and obesity is thought to be mainly due to environmental changes, i.e.

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