TY - JOUR PY - 2016// TI - Adapting Certified Safe Farm to North Carolina agriculture: an implementation study JO - Journal of agromedicine A1 - Storm, Julia F. A1 - Leprevost, Catherine E. A1 - Tutor-Marcom, Robin A1 - Cope, W. Gregory SP - 269 EP - 283 VL - 21 IS - 3 N2 - Certified Safe Farm (CSF) is a multi-modal safety and health program developed and assessed through multiple controlled intervention studies in Iowa. Although developed with the intent to be broadly applicable to agriculture, CSF has not been widely implemented outside the Midwestern United States. This paper describes the CSF implementation process in North Carolina (NC), as piloted on a large-scale in three agriculturally diverse and productive counties of NC, and reports its effectiveness using the Reach Effectiveness Adoption Implementation Maintenance (RE-AIM) framework. Implementation involved 1) capacity building through safety and health training, 2) adaptation of components of Iowa's CSF model to NC agriculture, 3) marketing and recruitment, and 4) formative evaluation, including an online survey and focus group discussion. From 2009-2012, 113 farms participated in at least one component of the CSF intervention, representing a NC farm participation rate of 3.1% in the study area. A major adaptation of NC implementation was the utilization of NC Cooperative Extension as the local driver of implementation local AgriSafe® clinics in Iowa. The most innovative adaptation to CSF components was the development of a defined economic incentive in the form of a cost-share program. The RE-AIM framework was found to be useful and relevant to the field of agricultural health and safety translational research. This study provides effectiveness measures and implementation alternatives useful for those considering implementing CSF. It informs current efforts to move CSF from research to practice through the National Sustainable Model CSF Program initiative.

Language: en

LA - en SN - 1059-924X UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1059924X.2016.1180273 ID - ref1 ER -