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Evaluation & the Health Professions
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Key Elements for Implementing Comprehensive Health Care Models for Persons with HIV

A Stakeholder Analysis

Lisa A. Melchior

The Measurement Group

A. T. Panter

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Trudy A. Larson

University of Nevada at Reno

Karen L. Meredith

Washington University

Karen Richardson-Nassif

University of Vermont & State Agricultural College

G. J. Huba

The Measurement Group

A semistructured interview was conducted with 69 stakeholders in three university-based health care projects that were funded to provide an integrated continuum of care for persons living with HIV/AIDS. Data from the key informant interviews yielded composite indicators of familiarity with the service model, the importance of the elements in the service model, and the perceived quality of services provided by these innovative HIV service demonstration projects. Ratings of service quality were related to ratings of the respondent’s knowledge of the service demonstration project, the importance of the various elements in the service continuum, and several indicators of stakeholder characteristics using the data modeling method titled Exhaustive CHAID (Chi-squared Automatic Interaction Detector). The groups of stakeholders most likely to give the highest quality or success ratings for these projects are identified. The implications of these findings for developing collaborative and comprehensive service models for persons with HIV/AIDS are discussed.

Evaluation & the Health Professions, Vol. 23, No. 3, 264-283 (2000)
DOI: 10.1177/01632780022034606


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