“…Many organizations may not have the resources to access tested interventions or to evaluate their own efforts. Evidence from a previous analysis of the data used here suggests that prevention program evaluation is further complicated by a disjuncture between needs at a local level, and broader social structures, norms, policy or funding priorities (Casey et al, 2013). Indeed, across prevention efforts in other health promotion domains such as substance abuse prevention, there has been limited evidence of an impact on public health outcomes due to a low rate of implementing evidence-based programming (Biglan & Taylor, 2000; Sandler, Ostrom, Bitner, Ayers, Wolchik, et al, 2005) and a lack of fit between these programs and the “goals and capacities” of community–based agencies (Sandler, et al, 2005).…”