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dc.contributor.authorRamos‐Vidal, Ignacio
dc.contributor.authorPalacio, Jorge
dc.contributor.authorDomínguez de la Ossa, Elsy
dc.contributor.authorWehdking, Ingrid
dc.date.accessioned2022-01-28T20:07:51Z
dc.date.available2022-01-28T20:07:51Z
dc.date.issued2021-05-26
dc.date.submitted2022-01-28
dc.identifier.citationRamos‐Vidal, I., Palacio, J., Domínguez de la Ossa, E., & Wehdking, I. (2021). Which factors explain information exchange and user referral among program implementers? Journal of Community Psychology, 1–23. https://doi.org/10.1002/jcop.22634spa
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12585/10425
dc.description.abstractThe Program for Psychosocial Care and Comprehensive Health for Victims serves, on a yearly basis, an average of 25,000 users in northern Colombia alone. The program is implemented by multidisciplinary teams comprised of psychologists, social workers, and community facilitators, who step in at the individual, family, and community levels. An attempt has been made to determine the effect generated by the timeframe through which professionals have been engaged with the program‐filling positions of centrality and betweenness within the networks of information exchange and user referral, including the potential mediating effect from the structure of the egocentric network of implementers in the two aforementioned networks and the moderating effect of the sense of belonging to a team of professionals. Both centrality and betweenness are positional measures describing the location actors occupied within the network structure. Centrality reflects the nominations made and receipt by an actor in a network and is considered an individual indicator of prominence and power. Betweenness shows the times that an actor act as a bridge among two actors in a network and it is considered an indicator of strategic positioning in social networks. An egocentric network is the local structure of relationships that each implementer maintains with his or her direct contacts. In this study, 112 active implementers were included, mostly women (n = 97, 88.2%), who had been working on the program for 16.9 months on average (SD = 14.7). Through conditional process analysis, it has been shown that the time that the implementers have been working on the program and the sense of belonging to the task team are relevant factors that interact with each other toward explaining the level of centrality and betweenness of professionals in the information exchange and user referral networksspa
dc.format.extent23 Páginas
dc.format.mimetypeapplication/pdfspa
dc.language.isoengspa
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/*
dc.sourceThe Journal of Community Psychology - vol. 59 n° 1spa
dc.titleWhich factors explain information exchange and user referral among program implementers?spa
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dc.type.driverinfo:eu-repo/semantics/articlespa
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dc.identifier.doihttps://doi.org/10.1002/jcop.22634
dc.subject.keywordsColombiaspa
dc.subject.keywordsConditional process analysisspa
dc.subject.keywordsImplementationspa
dc.subject.keywordsNetwork analysisspa
dc.subject.keywordsProgram evaluationspa
dc.subject.keywordsSense of communityspa
dc.rights.accessrightsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessspa
dc.rights.ccAttribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internacional*
dc.identifier.instnameUniversidad Tecnológica de Bolívarspa
dc.identifier.reponameRepositorio Universidad Tecnológica de Bolívarspa
dc.publisher.placeCartagena de Indiasspa
dc.subject.armarcLEMB
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Universidad Tecnológica de Bolívar - 2017 Institución de Educación Superior sujeta a inspección y vigilancia por el Ministerio de Educación Nacional. Resolución No 961 del 26 de octubre de 1970 a través de la cual la Gobernación de Bolívar otorga la Personería Jurídica a la Universidad Tecnológica de Bolívar.