FAQs
- What is NREPP?
- How has the NREPP program been revised and expanded?
- Why was NREPP expanded?
- Can I still access content from SAMHSA's Model Programs Web site (the old NREPP)?
- Can I appeal a rating?
- Why aren't prevention and treatment interventions considered under separate criteria?
- Where can I get help if I want to submit my intervention to NREPP, or if I just want more information about NREPP?
- Will environmental interventions/community-level interventions be included in NREPP?
- How do I find out if my project qualifies for submission?
- Will everyone who submits an application be reviewed?
- Can interventions emanating from outside the United States be considered by NREPP?
- Will there be another application cycle?
- Is there any cost to apply to NREPP?
- What are Legacy Programs?
- Once my intervention is accepted for review by NREPP, am I required to post the results on the NREPP Web site?
- Is there a recommended format for citing information from intervention summaries listed on this site?
The National Registry of Evidence-based Programs and Practices (NREPP), formerly the National Registry of Effective Programs, is a voluntary rating and classification system for mental health and substance abuse prevention and treatment interventions. The system is designed to identify, review, and disseminate information about interventions.
How has the NREPP program been revised and expanded?
NREPP originated as a program to promote model substance abuse prevention interventions that have a strong scientific evidence base. NREPP has expanded to include mental health promotion and treatment as well as substance abuse treatment interventions. As part of this expansion, SAMHSA has revised the review process and review criteria. Interventions are reviewed and classified based on the Quality of Research for specific outcomes achieved, rather than for a global assessment of the intervention. In addition, NREPP also includes a new dimension called Readiness for Dissemination, which is a measure of the availability and quality of training and implementation materials.
Increasingly, Federal agencies are recognizing the value to the public and to science of a voluntary classification system that summarizes the best current evidence about the effectiveness and utility of interventions. NREPP promises to be a transparent system to promote the dissemination of information on evidence-based interventions to prevent and treat mental and substance use disorders.
Can I still access content from SAMHSA's Model Programs Web site (the old NREPP)?
Programs from the Model Programs Web site that have been re-reviewed under the current NREPP will be listed in this site's Find Interventions section.
Most Effective and Promising Programs from the Model Programs Web site have consented to be posted in this site's Legacy Programs section.
Many documents from the Model Programs Web site are now available in this site's Legacy Documents section.
Model Programs that have not been re-reviewed and Effective and Promising Programs that have not consented to being placed on this site are listed at http://modelprograms.samhsa.gov.
If applicants have reason to doubt the validity or the accuracy of an NREPP review, they will have an opportunity to initiate a formal appeals process. In these rare cases, NREPP will provide instructions to the applicant on how to proceed with a formal appeal.
Why aren't prevention and treatment interventions considered under separate criteria?
The developers and Federal sponsors of NREPP believe that the scientific standards for evidence-based practice assessments contained within NREPP apply equally to the prevention and treatment components of behavioral health care.
Where can I get help if I want to submit my intervention to NREPP, or if I just want more information about NREPP?
Please contact NREPP at 1-866-43NREPP (1-866-436-7377) or e-mail us at NREPP@samhsa.hhs.gov with your questions.
Will environmental interventions/community-level interventions be included in NREPP?
Yes.
How do I find out if my project qualifies for submission?
To be considered for NREPP review, please read the information in the Submissions section of this site.
Will everyone who submits an application be reviewed?
No. Submitted interventions will be reviewed to first determine if they meet the minimum requirements for submission. If they do, then they will be assigned priority points based on whether they meet additional criteria. Specifically, interventions will receive 1 priority point if they have an outcome or outcomes relevant to SAMHSA's current priority areas, and 1 additional priority point if they have been evaluated using a quasi-experimental or experimental research design. Interventions with 2 priority points will receive the highest priority for review. The actual number of reviews conducted each year will depend on available contract resources.
Can interventions emanating from outside the United States be considered by NREPP?
Yes, if they meet all the NREPP requirements and if they have implementation materials that can be disseminated in the United States.
Will there be another application cycle?
NREPP will be accepting new submissions from October 1, 2009 - February 1, 2010.
Is there any cost to apply to NREPP?
There is no cost to apply. However, applicants must be prepared to send all relevant intervention materials as well as three copies of all dissemination materials at their own expense.
All programs that received Effective or Promising status under the previous NREPP system were offered the opportunity to be listed on this site as Legacy Programs. Legacy Programs have not been reviewed using the current NREPP criteria and rating system and are intended to be used for historical reference only.
Once my intervention is accepted for review by NREPP, am I required to post the results on the NREPP Web site?
While NREPP is a voluntary registry, each NREPP review represents a considerable investment of time and public funds. Any individual or organization that applies for an NREPP review is expected to authorize publication of the results in the form of an intervention summary (See Find Interventions). In rare cases, a program developer may choose to decline posting of a summary. To provide full disclosure to all users of this site, NREPP will publish the names of these reviewed but unlisted interventions on the NREPP Web site with a notation that the developers declined posting.
Is there a recommended format for citing information from intervention summaries listed on this site?
NREPP recommends the following citation format:
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. (date of posting). Name of program. Retrieved [month, date, year document was accessed], from the National Registry of Evidence-based Programs and Practices Web site, [URL of summary]
For example:
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. (2008, April). Motivational Interviewing. Retrieved September 1, 2009, from the National Registry of Evidence-based Programs and Practices Web site, http://www.nrepp.samhsa.gov/programfulldetails.asp?PROGRAM_ID=183

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