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    Home > Resource hub > Implementing and scaling up public health programs

Implementing and scaling up public health programs

The burden of chronic disease in Australia continues to increase. In order to reverse these trends in the Australian population, we need to ‘scale up’ chronic disease prevention programs and interventions that have been shown to work.
  • Implementing and scaling up public health programs

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A Prevention Centre project, led by researchers from the University of Sydney, is working with policy and practice partner agencies to improve the reach of effective chronic disease prevention programs with a range of tools and resources for program implementation and scale up.

Supporting practitioners and researchers to make decisions and document the process of scaling up interventions will improve the quality of information reported and shared; and will inform future scaling up activities. More broadly, this will improve understanding of implementation processes and practice, build capacity in the prevention workforce and enhance the availability of research evidence.

Details

DATE 9 Aug 2021

TYPE Factsheets

Prevention experts

  • Emeritus Professor Adrian Bauman AO

    The University of Sydney
    Headshot of Adrian Bauman
  • Dr Melanie Crane

    The University of Sydney
    Headshot of Melanie Crane
  • Dr Karen Lee

    The University of Sydney
    Dr Karen Lee

Prevention methodologies

  • Implementation, evaluation and scale up ,

Related projects

  • Implementation and scale up

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Acknowledgement of Country

The Australian Prevention Partnership Centre acknowledges Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the First Australians and Traditional Custodians of the lands where we live, learn, and work.

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Funding Partners

The Australian Prevention Partnership Centre is funded by the NHMRC, Australian Government Department of Health, ACT Health, Cancer Council Australia, NSW Ministry of Health, Wellbeing SA, Tasmanian Department of Health, and VicHealth. The Australian Government also contributed through the Medical Research Future Fund. Queensland Health became a financial contributor in 2022. The Prevention Centre is administered by the Sax Institute.

©2023 The Sax Institute.

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