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The good coach: implementation and sustainment factors that affect coaching as evidence-based intervention fidelity support

Lara M. Gunderson (Behavioral Health Research Center of the Southwest, Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation, Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA)
Cathleen E. Willging (Behavioral Health Research Center of the Southwest, Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation, Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA)
Elise M. Trott Jaramillo (Behavioral Health Research Center of the Southwest, Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation, Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA)
Amy E. Green (Child and Adolescent Services Research Center, University of California, San Diego, California, USA)
Danielle L. Fettes (Child and Adolescent Services Research Center, University of California, San Diego, California, USA)
Debra B. Hecht (Section of Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA)
Gregory A. Aarons (Child and Adolescent Services Research Center, University of California, San Diego, California, USA)

Journal of Children's Services

ISSN: 1746-6660

Article publication date: 14 June 2018

Issue publication date: 21 June 2018

739

Abstract

Purpose

Evidence-based interventions (EBIs) for human services unfold within complicated social and organizational circumstances and are influenced by the attitudes and behaviors of diverse stakeholders situated within these environments. Coaching is commonly regarded as an effective strategy to support service providers in delivering EBIs and attaining high levels of fidelity over time. The purpose of this paper is to address a lacuna in research examining the factors influencing coaching, an important EBI support component.

Design/methodology/approach

The authors use the Exploration, Preparation, Implementation, and Sustainment framework to consider inner- and outer-context factors that affect coaching over time. This case study of coaching draws from a larger qualitative data set from three iterative investigations of implementation and sustainment of a home visitation program, SafeCare®. SafeCare is an EBI designed to reduce child neglect.

Findings

The authors elaborate on six major categories of findings derived from an iterative data coding and analysis process: perceptions of “good” and “bad” coaches by system sustainment status; coach as peer; in-house coaching capacity; intervention developer requirements vs other outer-context needs; outer-context support; and inner-context support.

Practical implications

Coaching is considered a key component for effective implementation of EBIs in public-sector systems, yet is under-studied. Understanding inner- and outer-context factors illuminates the ways they affect the capacity of coaches to support service delivery.

Originality/value

This paper demonstrates that coaching can accomplish more than provision of EBI fidelity support. Stakeholders characterized coaches as operating as boundary spanners who link inner and outer contexts to enable EBI implementation and sustainment.

Keywords

Citation

Gunderson, L.M., Willging, C.E., Trott Jaramillo, E.M., Green, A.E., Fettes, D.L., Hecht, D.B. and Aarons, G.A. (2018), "The good coach: implementation and sustainment factors that affect coaching as evidence-based intervention fidelity support", Journal of Children's Services, Vol. 13 No. 1, pp. 1-17. https://doi.org/10.1108/JCS-09-2017-0043

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2018, Emerald Publishing Limited

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