2022 Early Hearing Detection & Intervention Virtual Conference
March 13 - 15, 2022
Intervention Mapping as a Public Health Approach to Address Lost to Intervention
This presentation will cover a developing research program using intervention mapping. Intervention mapping is a public health protocol that guides program development to support community-centered, research-driven, and theory-based interventions. Intervention Mapping has been used to develop protocols on various topics, including preventative medicine, cardiovascular health, and cancer. In 2017, Early Hearing Detection and Intervention programs in the United States identified 6,537 children with hearing levels outside of the typical range. These children should access support services, including family support, audiology, speech-pathology, sign language instruction, and more. While these children may be at risk for language deprivation if they do not have support in learning language, 34.5% do not enroll in early intervention services. The program that will be discussed has been developed in the intervention mapping tradition using a newly developed model of what leads to lost to intervention. This model was developed using the Delphi methods and stakeholder input from professionals, academics, advocates, and families of children who are D/deaf and hard of hearing.
- Participants will be able to describe the role of intervention mapping in public health program planning.
- Participants will be able to explain how stakeholder input is integrated into this program and intervention mapping as a whole.
- Participants will be provided with the opportunity to modify the presented program in conjunction with the primary presenter for implementation in the future.
Poster:
3353554_14931Torri AnnWoodruff.pdf
Presenter: Torri Ann Woodruff-Gautherin
Torri Ann Woodruff, Ph.D. is the LEND coordinator for the UConn UCEDD and CT LEND. Passionate about bolstering the voices of stakeholders, Torri Ann implements qualitative methods to highlight the power and value of individual voices in making change. Torri Ann is interested in the intersection of public health, early intervention, and family support. She is currently preparing her dissertation looking at the use of family education to support early intervention enrollment.
ASHA DISCLOSURE:
Financial -
• Receives Salary for Employment,Teaching and speaking from University of Connecticut.
Nonfinancial -
Kathleen M Cienkowski, Ph.D. CCC/A is an Associate Professor and Department Head of SLHS at the University of Connecticut. Dr. Cienkowski studies the benefits of AR among patients with acquired hearing loss and their families. Her work has been funded by National Institutes of Health and the Veterans Administration. She is the Past-President of the Academy of Rehabilitative Audiology, Past-Coordinator for the American Speech, Language and Hearing Association (ASHA) Special Interest Group 7: Aural Rehabilitation and Its Instrumentation. She currently serves a audiology discipline coordinator for the UCONN LEND and co-investigator for the UCONN Pediatric LEND Supplement grant.
ASHA DISCLOSURE:
Financial -
Nonfinancial -