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1.
BMC Psychiatry ; 24(1): 256, 2024 Apr 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38575916

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Severe mental illness (SMI) imposes a substantial worldwide burden of disability, highlighting the need for comprehensive and adaptable mental health services. This study aims to assess the efficacy and cost-effectiveness of community-based mental health services (CBMHS) in reducing relapse and rehospitalization rates among individuals with SMI in Iran. METHOD: A systematic review and meta-analysis were conducted. Medline, EMBASE, ISI, SCOPUS, and ProQuest were searched until December 2022. We focused on randomized controlled trials, quasi-experimental studies, or economic studies related to individuals with SMI. Out of 127 articles, 17 were selected for a full-text review. The primary outcomes were the severity of psychopathology, rehospitalization rates, and the mental health of caregivers. We also examined community-based interventions and their impact on various outcomes. Data extraction and risk of bias assessment were performed, and critical appraisal was conducted using JBI checklists. Meta-analysis was carried out using STATA software. (PROSPERO registration. CRD42022332660). RESULT: Rehospitalization rates among patients who received CBMHS were significantly lower, with an odds ratio of 2.14 (95% CI: 1.44 to 3.19), indicating a 2.14 times lower likelihood than those who received treatment as usual. A reduction in psychopathology accompanied this, SMD: -0.31, 95% CI: -0.49 to -0.13, I2 = 40.23%). Moreover, there was a notable improvement in social skills (SMD: -0.7, 95% CI: -0.98 to -0.44, I2 = 0.00%). The burden on caregivers also decreased (SMD: -0.55, 95% CI: -0.99 to -0.1, I2 = 63.2). The Incremental Cost-Effectiveness Ratio (ICER) for QUALY was acceptable, albeit with a wide range of 613 to 8400 Dollars. CONCLUSION: CBMHS has demonstrated effectiveness and efficiency in Iran as a developing country. Additionally, it shows promise in mitigating the shortage of acute psychiatry beds. Using multiple data collection tools poses a limitation regarding data consolidation and conducting a meta-analysis.


Subject(s)
Community Mental Health Services , Mental Disorders , Humans , Community Health Services , Cost-Benefit Analysis , Iran , Mental Disorders/therapy , Mental Disorders/psychology
2.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34104456

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Few studies provide clear rationale for and the reception of adaptations of evidence-based interventions. To address this gap, we describe the context-dependent adaptations in critical time intervention-task shifting (CTI-TS), a manualized recovery program for individuals with psychosis in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil and Santiago, Chile. Implications of the adaptations - incorporating a task-shifting approach and modifying the mode of community-based service delivery - are examined from users' perspectives. METHODS: A secondary analysis of in-depth interviews with CTI-TS users (n = 9 in Brazil; n = 15 in Chile) was conducted. Using the framework method, we thematically compared how participants from each site perceived the main adapted components of CTI-TS. RESULTS: Users of both sites appreciated the task-shifting worker pair to provide personalized, flexible, and relatable support. They wanted CTI-TS to be longer and experienced difficulty maintaining intervention benefits in the long-term. In Chile, stigma and a perceived professional hierarchy toward the task-shifting providers were more profound than in Brazil. Engagement with community-based services delivery in homes and neighborhoods (Chile), and at community mental health centers (Brazil) were influenced by various personal, familial, financial, and social factors. Uniquely, community violence was a significant barrier to engagement in Brazil. CONCLUSION: CTI-TS' major adaptations were informed by the distinct mental health systems and social context of Santiago and Rio. Evaluation of user experiences with these adaptations provides insights into implementing and scaling-up task-shifting and community-oriented interventions in the region through the creation of specialized roles for the worker pair, targeting sustained intervention effects, and addressing socio-cultural barriers.

3.
Psychiatr Q ; 92(2): 489-499, 2021 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32812141

ABSTRACT

It has been suggested that psychiatric multimorbidity may better characterize severely impaired psychiatric patients than individual severe mental illness (SMI) diagnoses, and that these patients may be better served by centers offering integrated co-located, psychiatric and social services than in conventional clinics providing one-to-one care. We tested the hypothesis that multimorbidity is a critical characteristic of Veterans treated at a co-located multi-service Veteran's Health Administration (VHA) program originally established to treat Veterans living with SMI. Administrative data from the VA Connecticut Health Care System from fiscal year 2012 were used to compare veterans using diverse mental health and social services at the Errera Community Care Center (ECCC), an integrated "one-stop shop" for SMI veterans, and those seen exclusively at standard outpatient mental health clinics. Bivariate and multiple logistic regression analyses were used to compare groups on demographic characteristics, psychiatric and medical diagnoses, service utilization, and psychotropic medication fills. Results: Of the 11,092 veterans included in the study, 2281 (20.6%) had been treated at the ECCC and 8811 (79.4%) had not. Multivariable analysis highlighted the association of treatment in the ECCC and younger age, lower income, homelessness, and especially multimorbidity including both multiple substance use and multiple psychiatric diagnoses. Programs originally designed to address the diverse needs of patients living with SMI and homelessness may be usefully characterized as treating patients with psychiatric multimorbidity, a term of greater clinical relevance. Effectiveness research is needed to evaluate the one-stop shop approach to their treatment.


Subject(s)
Mental Disorders/epidemiology , Mental Disorders/therapy , Mentally Ill Persons/psychology , Multimorbidity , Substance-Related Disorders , Veterans/psychology , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Substance-Related Disorders/epidemiology , Substance-Related Disorders/therapy , United States/epidemiology , United States Department of Veterans Affairs
4.
Int J Ment Health Syst ; 13: 45, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31249613

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: This study describes the Moldovan mental health system and reform needs before and during the initial phase of the MENSANA project (2014-2022) over the period 2007-2017. METHODS: A situation analysis was performed on: (1) the comparative need based on a country comparison using publicly available mental health system data; (2) the normative need based on a document review comparing the Moldovan mental health services structure with the norms of the WHO on the ideal mix of services, and a content analysis of interview and survey data from professionals (n = 93); (3) the felt need based on a content analysis of survey data from service users and carers (n = 52). RESULTS: The main finding from the comparative analysis is that mental health care remains largely institutionalized with little alternative care options in the community. Moldova has large mental hospitals and a high number of psychiatric beds per 100.000 population (59.8) in comparison with the South-eastern European Health Network and EU15 average in 2014 (47.63 and 36.61). The country also shows an inversion of the ideal mix of services. This points to the potential need for a mental health system reform which was confirmed by the perspectives of the professionals, service users and carers. The majority of respondents favour a mental services reform (82.8% of the professionals and 92.3% of the care recipients) and express numerous issues and reform needs with the most frequently mentioned being the need to: (1) reintegrate service users in society, community and family; (2) deinstitutionalise and implement CBMHS; (3) improve the accessibility and quality of services, and; and 4) address health workforce issues. CONCLUSION: All three types of need explored in the situation analysis (e.g. comparative, normative and felt) point towards the necessity to reform the mental health system in Moldova. However, it is emphasized that this will only materialize when underlying socio-economic challenges that both constrain the implementation of community-based mental health services and foster the dependence of people with a mental illness on inpatient services are addressed.

5.
J Child Fam Stud ; 27(6): 1968-1980, 2018 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30220834

ABSTRACT

Therapy homework includes tasks given to clients to complete outside of session to facilitate new knowledge/skills or to advance treatment goals. Homework completion, an important element of parent engagement in child mental health (MH) treatment, has been associated with improved child outcomes. The current pilot study assessed the design/assign phase of the therapy homework process to examine a) the extent to which therapists implemented engagement strategies with parents and b) whether therapist deployment of engagement strategies in early treatment predicted subsequent parent participation in homework planning. We included an ethnically-diverse sample of 10 therapists and 11 parent/child dyads receiving community-based MH services who participated in a pilot intervention study. Two observational coding systems were developed to code treatment session recordings for the extent to which a) therapists implemented engagement strategies with parents and b) parents contributed to therapy homework planning. Findings revealed low extensiveness of therapist implementation of engagement strategies with parents. As hypothesized, therapist use of engagement strategies (Collaboration, Empowerment, and Psychoeducation) in early treatment significantly predicted subsequent parent homework planning (sharing perspective on homework planning). However, therapist use of Alliance was unrelated to parent homework planning. These preliminary results suggest that therapist implementation of engagement strategies in early treatment may promote parent participation in homework planning, which is an important precursor to homework completion. This pilot study suggests potential future directions for both research on and training for community-based therapists in implementing successful strategies to promote parent homework planning in child MH treatment.

6.
J Evid Inf Soc Work ; 13(4): 362-72, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26849168

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Screening and referral for geriatric depression by service agencies is associated with poor treatment engagement indicating the need to transform services to directly provide depression care. OBJECTIVE: To describe a multi-organization workgroup implementation planning process used to transform a community-based screening and referral program to provide a brief evidence-based intervention for older adults with depressive symptoms. METHODS: An iterative implementation procedure used by a multi-stakeholder group that selected an evidence-based practice, planned implementation rollout, planned counselor training, and designed an implementation evaluation. RESULTS: The workgroup successfully followed the implementation procedure and developed a plan for the implementation of an evidence-based intervention. Overall, the workgroup prioritized decisions that favored feasibility and low implementation burden. CONCLUSION: A multi-organization workgroup can benefit from a semi-structured implementation planning procedure because it provides all stakeholders with a shared roadmap for implementation planning.


Subject(s)
Community Mental Health Services/organization & administration , Depression/diagnosis , Interinstitutional Relations , Mass Screening/organization & administration , Referral and Consultation/organization & administration , Depression/therapy , Evidence-Based Practice , Humans
7.
J Child Fam Stud ; 25(1): 275-289, 2016 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28781510

ABSTRACT

The experience of parents in helping their children access and use mental health services is linked to service outcomes. Parent peer support service, based on the principles of family-centered care, is one model to improve parent experience and engagement in services. Yet, little is known about how best to integrate this service into the existing array of mental health services. Integration is challenged by philosophical differences between family-centered services and traditional children's treatment services, and is influenced by the organizational social contexts in which these services are embedded. We describe an organizational and frontline team intervention that draws on research in behavior change, technology transfer, and organizational social context for youth with serious emotional disturbance. The two-pronged intervention, called FAMILY (FCC and ARC Model to Improve the Lives of Youth) is guided by the evidence-based Availability, Responsiveness, and Continuity (ARC) organizational intervention, targeted primarily at program and upper management leadership and includes a family-centered care (FCC) intervention, targeted at frontline providers. The approach employs multilevel implementation strategies to promote the uptake, implementation and sustainability of new practices. We include examples of exercises and tools, and highlight implementation challenges and lessons learned in facilitating program and staff level changes in family-centered service delivery.

8.
Saúde Soc ; 18(3): 446-455, jul.-set. 2009.
Article in Portuguese | LILACS | ID: lil-528609

ABSTRACT

Este estudo tem por objetivo analisar as estratégias de produção de cuidado em saúde mental de um Centro de Convivência e Cooperativa (CECCO) - serviço da rede de atenção à saúde mental do município de São Paulo - na perspectiva de seu alinhamento às políticas de saúde mental e promoção da saúde, verificando as potencialidades da interação entre elas, no cotidiano das práticas de saúde. A análise baseou-se no material empírico obtido por meio de entrevista semiestruturada junto ao gerente do serviço estudado, assim como nos achados da literatura e nos documentos oficiais do Ministério da Saúde. Verificou-se que, por meio de ações intersetoriais, que visam ao fortalecimento da participação social, do empoderamento de indivíduos e comunidade e da equidade, o CECCO articula pressupostos da saúde mental e da promoção da saúde, produzindo autonomia e cidadania e tornando-se um lugar que constrói sentido de vida às pessoas.


Subject(s)
Humans , Public Policy , Health Promotion , Mental Health , Community Mental Health Services
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