Abstract
Disruptions of varying severity often occur in the course of an organization’s work to implement new programs or projects. These disruptions may slow their progress or even derail the work altogether. Resilient organizations must be prepared to respond in a thoughtful and timely way to disruptions. Readiness, Resilience and Recovery is an adaptable readiness assessment tool that organizations can use to proceed with their work with insight about their readiness status and how their readiness has been impacted by a disruption. The resulting information can then be used to guide the development of solutions for recovery and build the organization’s overall capacity for resilience. Based on our early experience, the Readiness, Resilience and Recovery approach is emerging as a tool that can be useful when organizations face significant disruptions. We have found it to be adaptable to different types of projects, at various points in the implementation cycle, and with multiple types of disruptions. To demonstrate its use, this illustrative paper provides five examples from different projects and settings: Substance Abuse Treatment Services, Multi-Site Sexual Assault Prevention Initiative, Serve and Connect (a Police-Community Relationships Initiative), Carolina Family Engagement Center (family engagement in schools), and Action for Equity (an equity intervention). Practical uses of the tool and conceptualizing it within important implementation science concepts are discussed.Supplementary InformationThe online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s43477-021-00011-6.
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