DOI: 10.1177/15248399231193693 ISSN:

Qualitative Assessment of Key Implementation Factors in a Faith-Based Response to Intimate Partner Violence

Beata Debinski, Mark Bittle, Caitlin E. Kennedy, Vanya Jones, Andrea Carlson Gielen
  • Nursing (miscellaneous)
  • Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Background

Faith-based organizations (FBOs) have a scant history in the literature of implementing intimate partner violence (IPV) initiatives, though many members of faith communities consider it an important issue. Furthermore, the limited studies on this topic have not explored organizational factors that are important in the implementation of such efforts.

Purpose

To investigate factors that influence the implementation of IPV prevention and response by one Catholic organization at both diocesan and parish levels.

Methods

We conducted sixteen semi-structured interviews with members of Archdiocese of Chicago Domestic Violence Outreach (ACDVO) leadership. Using deductive content analysis, we drew on all 14 constructs and sub-constructs from the inner setting domain of the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR) for coding transcripts and characterizing factors influencing implementation success.

Results

Seven CFIR constructs were useful in identifying factors that influenced implementation success of ACDVO. At the diocesan level, the organization’s leadership structure, their driven culture, and in-kind available resources propelled their work. At the level of parish ministries, successful implementation was facilitated by networking and communication among parishes. At the diocesan-level, access to knowledge and information through ACDVO’s Parish Support Committee, compatibility with parish values, leadership engagement, and available resources from parishes supported implementation.

Conclusions

We identified modifiable and reproducible inner setting factors that influence implementation of a Catholic IPV initiative at the diocesan-level and support parish ministries in their local activities. Future work should validate these findings in other dioceses and examine non-Catholic FBO settings.

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