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1.
Discov Psychol ; 4(1): 43, 2024.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38686018

RESUMO

Given the relationship between poor engagement and worse treatment outcomes, improving engagement has been the focus of attention in recent years. Engagement is a particular challenge among minoritized and otherwise challenged youth, such as those from socioeconomically disadvantaged groups, including youth in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), where they face lower levels of access to resources, including mental health treatment. The present study describes engagement challenges that arose in an uncontrolled pre-post evaluation of a school-based, modular, multi-problem, stepped-care intervention delivered in urban Indian communities. Specifically, the study aimed to (1) characterize barriers and facilitators of youth treatment engagement; and (2) evaluate treatment acceptability and fit of treatment from the youth perspective. Youth participants completed semi-structured interviews, which were transcribed and coded using thematic analysis. Participants described numerous facilitators to engagement (e.g., positive therapeutic relationship) and reported high overall satisfaction with the intervention, while also identifying barriers to engagement (e.g., concerns about confidentiality) and offering suggestions to increase fit and acceptability (e.g., more visually appealing treatment materials). Findings highlight ways in which engagement can be enhanced and implementation supports improved to maximize treatment effectiveness among minoritized and disadvantaged youth in LMICs. Supplementary Information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s44202-024-00154-1.

2.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38676872

RESUMO

Positive organizational climate - employee perceptions of their work environment and the impact of this environment on well-being and functioning - is associated with desirable organizational and client-level outcomes in mental health organizations. Clinical supervisors are well-positioned to impact organizational climate, as they serve as intermediaries between higher-level administrators who drive the policies and procedures and the therapists impacted by such decisions. This cross-sectional study examined the role of clinical supervisors as drivers of therapist perceptions of organizational climate within supervisory teams. Specifically, the present study investigated: (1) shared perceptions of organizational climate among therapists on the same supervisory team; (2) predictors of therapist climate perceptions. Eighty-six therapists were supervised by 22 supervisors. Indices of interrater agreement and interrater reliability of therapists on the same supervisory team were examined to determine shared or distinct perceptions of organizational climate. Multi-level models were used to examine whether supervisor attitudes towards evidence-based practices and therapist perceptions of supervisor communication predicted perceived organizational climate. Results showed perceptions of organizational cohesion and autonomy were shared among therapists on the same supervisory team and distinct from therapists on different supervisory teams. Therapist perceptions of their supervisor's communication was positively associated with perceptions of organizational cohesion and autonomy. These findings align with emerging evidence that middle managers shape their employees' experience of their work environment through communication strategies. These findings also point to the potential for intervening at lower organizational levels to improve overall organizational climate.

3.
Adm Policy Ment Health ; 51(2): 268-285, 2024 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38261119

RESUMO

This study investigated coded data retrieved from clinical dashboards, which are decision-support tools that include a graphical display of clinical progress and clinical activities. Data were extracted from clinical dashboards representing 256 youth (M age = 11.9) from 128 practitioners who were trained in the Managing and Adapting Practice (MAP) system (Chorpita & Daleiden in BF Chorpita EL Daleiden 2014 Structuring the collaboration of science and service in pursuit of a shared vision. 43(2):323 338. 2014, Chorpita & Daleiden in BF Chorpita EL Daleiden 2018 Coordinated strategic action: Aspiring to wisdom in mental health service systems. 25(4):e12264. 2018) in 55 agencies across 5 regional mental health systems. Practitioners labeled up to 35 fields (i.e., descriptions of clinical activities), with the options of drawing from a controlled vocabulary or writing in a client-specific activity. Practitioners then noted when certain activities occurred during the episode of care. Fields from the extracted data were coded and reliability was assessed for Field Type, Practice Element Type, Target Area, and Audience (e.g., Caregiver Psychoeducation: Anxiety would be coded as Field Type = Practice Element; Practice Element Type = Psychoeducation; Target Area = Anxiety; Audience = Caregiver). Coders demonstrated moderate to almost perfect interrater reliability. On average, practitioners recorded two activities per session, and clients had 10 unique activities across all their sessions. Results from multilevel models showed that clinical activity characteristics and sessions accounted for the most variance in the occurrence, recurrence, and co-occurrence of clinical activities, with relatively less variance accounted for by practitioners, clients, and regional systems. Findings are consistent with patterns of practice reported in other studies and suggest that clinical dashboards may be a useful source of clinical information. More generally, the use of a controlled vocabulary for clinical activities appears to increase the retrievability and actionability of healthcare information and thus sets the stage for advancing the utility of clinical documentation.


Assuntos
Sistemas de Painéis , Serviços de Saúde Mental , Adolescente , Humanos , Criança , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes , Transtornos de Ansiedade , Documentação
4.
Adm Policy Ment Health ; 51(1): 103-122, 2024 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38032421

RESUMO

PURPOSE: Chart notes provide a low-cost data source that could help characterize what occurs in treatment with sufficient precision to improve management of care. This study assessed the interrater reliability of treatment content coded from chart notes and evaluated its concordance with content coded from transcribed treatment sessions. METHOD: Fifty randomly selected and digitally recorded treatment events were transcribed and coded for practice content. Independent coders then applied the same code system to chart notes for these same treatment events. ANALYSIS: We measured reliability and concordance of practice occurrence and extensiveness at two levels of specificity: practices (full procedures) and steps (subcomponents of those procedures). RESULTS: For chart notes, practices had moderate interrater reliability (M k = 0.50, M ICC = 0.56) and steps had moderate (M ICC = 0.74) to substantial interrater reliability (M k = 0.78). On average, 2.54 practices and 5.64 steps were coded per chart note and 4.53 practices and 13.10 steps per transcript. Across sources, ratings for 64% of practices and 41% of steps correlated significantly, with those with significant correlations generally demonstrating moderate concordance (practice M r = 0.48; step M r = 0.47). Forty one percent of practices and 34% of steps from transcripts were also identified in the corresponding chart notes. CONCLUSION: Chart notes provide an accessible data source for evaluating treatment content, with different levels of specificity posing tradeoffs for validity and reliability, which in turn may have implications for chart note interfaces, training, and new metrics to support accurate, reliable, and efficient measurement of clinical practice.


Assuntos
Codificação Clínica , Serviços de Saúde Mental , Humanos , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes , Serviços de Saúde Mental/normas
5.
J Nurs Educ ; 62(12): 721-727, 2023 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38049299

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Effective strategies for developing scholarly writing skills in postsecondary nursing students are needed. Generative artificial intelligence (GAI) tools, such as ChatGPT, for automated writing evaluation (AWE) hold promise for mitigating challenges associated with scholarly writing instruction in nursing education. This article explores the suitability of ChatGPT for AWE in writing instruction. METHOD: ChatGPT feedback on 42 nursing student texts from the Michigan Corpus of Upper-Level Student Papers was assessed. Assessment criteria were derived from recent AWE research. RESULTS: ChatGPT demonstrated utility as an AWE tool. Its scoring performance demonstrated stricter grading than human raters, related feedback to macro-level writing features, and supported multiple submissions and learner autonomy. CONCLUSION: Despite concerns surrounding GAI in academia, educators can accelerate the feedback process without increasing their workload, and students can receive individualized feedback by incorporating AWE provided by ChatGPT into the writing process. [J Nurs Educ. 2023;62(12):721-727.].


Assuntos
Educação em Enfermagem , Estudantes de Enfermagem , Humanos , Inteligência Artificial , Retroalimentação , Redação
6.
Adm Policy Ment Health ; 50(6): 946-965, 2023 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37715814

RESUMO

Theories emphasize the role of individual and organizational characteristics in implementation outcomes, yet research indicates that these characteristics account for only a small amount of variance in those outcomes. Innovation characteristics might be important proximal determinants of implementation outcomes but are infrequently examined in mental health services research. This study examined the relative variance explained by individual, organizational, and innovation characteristics on behavioral intentions, a central implementation outcome in implementation theories. Data were collected from 95 therapists and 28 supervisors who participated in a cluster randomized trial that tested the effectiveness of two clinical decision-making innovations. Multilevel models compared individual, organizational, and innovation characteristics as predictors of therapists' intentions to use the innovations. Subsequent mediational path analyses tested whether innovation characteristics mediated the effect of innovation type on intentions. Individual and organizational characteristics explained 29% of the variability in therapists' intentions. Approximately 75% of the variability in therapists' intentions was accounted for by innovation characteristics. Individual and organizational characteristics were not statistically significant predictors of intentions after controlling for innovation characteristics. The indirect effect of innovation type on intentions through therapists' beliefs was statistically significant (B = 0.410, 95% Bootstrapped CI = [0.071, 0.780]), but the direct effect of innovation type was not (B = 0.174, p = .365). Innovation characteristics are related to therapist intentions and might explain why some innovations are received more favorably than others. Future studies should explore the complex interrelationships between these beliefs alongside other individual or organizational characteristics.


Assuntos
Intenção , Humanos , Inovação Organizacional
7.
EClinicalMedicine ; 57: 101835, 2023 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36874395

RESUMO

Background: Interventions targeting combined sexual and reproductive health, Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) management and mental health care in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) are few. There is a need to address common determinants of poor mental, psychosocial and sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR) through multimodal and multipronged interventions for adolescents. The main objective of this study was to identify whether and how interventions targeting adolescent SRHR and HIV with a focus on pregnant and parenting adolescents in SSA include mental health components and how these components and their outcomes have been reported in the literature. Methods: We carried out a two process scoping review approach between 01.04.2021 and 23.08.2022. In the first stage, we searched the PubMed database to identify studies focusing on adolescents and young people aged 10 to 24 from 2001 to 2021. We identified studies focusing on HIV and SRHR that had mental health and psychosocial aspects to the interventions. Our search yielded 7025 studies. Of these 38 were eligible based on our screening criteria that covered interventions, and on further scrutiny, using PracticeWise, an established coding system, we identified select problems and practices to provide a more granular assessment of how interventions developed for this context mapped on to specific problems. At this second stage process, we selected 27 studies for inclusion as actual interventional designs for further systematic scoping of their findings and we used the Joanna Briggs Quality Appraisal checklist to rate these studies. This review was registered within the International Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews (PROSPERO), number CRD42021234627. Findings: Our first set of findings is that when coding problems and solutions, mental health concerns were the least common category of problems targeted in these SRHR/HIV interventions; nevertheless, psychoeducation and cognitive behavioral strategies such as improved communication, assertiveness training, and informational support were offered widely. Of the 27 interventional studies included in the final review, 17 RCTs, 7 open trials, and 3 mixed designs, represented nine countries of the 46 countries in SSA. Intervention types included peer, community, family, digital, and mixed modality interventions. Eight interventions focused on caregivers and youth. Social or community ecology associated problems (being an orphan, sexual abuse, homelessness, negative cultural norms) were the most common risk factors and were more frequent than medical issues associated with HIV exposure. Our findings highlight the relevance and centrality of social issues related to adolescent mental and physical health along with the need to strengthen multimodal interventions along the lines of problems we have identified in our review. Interpretation: Combined interventions jointly addressing adolescent SRHR, HIV, and mental health have been relatively understudied, despite evidence that adverse social and community factors are rampant in this population. Funding: MK was funded by Fogarty International CenterK43 TW010716-05 and lead the initiative.

8.
J Clin Child Adolesc Psychol ; 52(2): 284-309, 2023.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36787342

RESUMO

The field has spent more than 50 years investing in the quality of youth mental healthcare, with intervention science yielding roughly 1,300 efficacious treatments. In the latter half of this period, concurrent efforts in implementation science have developed effective methods for supporting front-line service organizations and therapists to begin to bridge the science to service gap. However, many youths and families still do not benefit fully from these strategic investments due to low treatment engagement: nearly half of youths in need of services pursue them, and among those who do, roughly another half terminate prematurely. The negative impact of low engagement is substantial, and is disproportionally and inequitably so for many. We contend that to build a robust and "finished" bridge connecting science and service, the field must go beyond its two historical foci of designing interventions and preparing therapists to deliver them, to include an intentional focus on the youths and families who participate in these interventions and who work with those therapists. In this paper, we highlight the significance of treatment engagement in youth mental healthcare and discuss the current state of the literature related to four priorities: conceptualization, theory, measurement, and interventions. Next, we offer an example from our own program of research as one illustration for advancing these priorities. Finally, we propose recommendations to act on these priorities.


Assuntos
Atenção à Saúde , Humanos , Adolescente , Previsões
10.
Psychother Res ; 33(5): 669-682, 2023 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36449985

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: This study examined the role of youth race, youth-therapist racial matching, and youth-reported therapist cultural understanding on early treatment engagement in mental health services. METHOD: The sample included 1158 youths and 126 therapists. Approximately four weeks after the first therapy session, youths responded to a survey assessing five engagement dimensions. Cultural understanding was assessed by asking youths to rate within that questionnaire the extent their therapist "understands their culture and values." Three multivariate multiple regression models were conducted to assess the associations of race, racial matching, and cultural understanding with treatment engagement. RESULTS: Youth race and racial matching were not significant predictors of treatment engagement, whereas youth-reported therapist cultural understanding was a significant predictor of engagement. Cultural understanding had the highest average effect size across all treatment engagement dimensions (ηp2 = .36) compared with youth race (ηp2 = .00) and racial matching (ηp2 = .00). Race was examined as a moderator of the effects of racial matching and cultural understanding on treatment engagement and did not yield significant effect sizes. CONCLUSIONS: Findings suggest that increasing therapists' cultural understanding of their youth clients may be a promising strategy for engaging youths early in mental health services.


Assuntos
Serviços de Saúde Mental , Humanos , Adolescente , Inquéritos e Questionários
11.
Adm Policy Ment Health ; 49(6): 943-961, 2022 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35920954

RESUMO

PURPOSE: Treatment engagement poses challenges for youth mental health providers. With the expansion of evidence-based treatments (EBTs), providers face complex decisions regarding how to engage youth and families using available information sources. This study investigated how EBT protocols are associated with the selection and delivery of engagement practices. METHOD: Twenty engagement practices were coded in a sample of digital recordings of early treatment sessions (N = 193) from the Child STEPs in California study, a randomized trial testing modular treatment and community-implemented treatment for youth mental health problems. Data were collected on which protocols mental health providers reportedly used to guide their sessions and the protocols in which they had received training. We examined which information sources (i.e., the guiding protocol, other protocols in training history, unspecified source) were associated with observed engagement practices. RESULTS: In sessions guided by a protocol, most observed engagement practices were accounted for by the guiding protocol (p < .001), rather than protocols in training history or unspecified sources (p < .001). In sessions not guided by a protocol, most observed practices were accounted for by training history (p < .001). Practice frequency and extensiveness was generally greater when a protocol guided the session. CONCLUSIONS: Inclusion in protocols is associated with the selection and delivery of engagement practices, but this strategy might be insufficient for supporting the use of the full range of engagement practices supported by evidence. Supports are needed that leverage the engagement evidence base to ensure that selected practices empirically fit the engagement needs of youth and families.


Assuntos
Serviços de Saúde Mental , Adolescente , Criança , Humanos , Protocolos Clínicos , Saúde Mental , Ensaios Clínicos Controlados Aleatórios como Assunto
12.
J Consult Clin Psychol ; 90(3): 258-271, 2022 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35099207

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: Although the literature on treatment engagement varies in its characterization and enumeration of the relevant dimensions, the dimensionality of treatment engagement has yet to be tested empirically using a uniform measurement approach. We therefore examined the structural validity of a hypothesized five-factor model, using a confirmatory factor-analytic approach applied to youth and caregiver reports of their own perceived level of engagement. METHOD: Data were obtained from 1,807 primarily Hispanic American (56.0%) and African American/Black (26.3%) youth (Mage = 12.7; 46.8% female) and/or their caregivers participating in school mental health services in Los Angeles, California, and rural South Carolina. Participants (N youth records = 1,415; N caregiver records = 1,361) rated 35 self-report indicators of treatment engagement, hypothesized to represent five REACH dimensions (Relationship, Expectancy, Attendance, Clarity, and Homework), approximately 4 weeks following an intake assessment. RESULTS: Results uniformly supported the hypothesized five-factor models relative to one-factor, youth χdiff(10)² = 2,092.96, p < .001; caregiver χdiff(10)² = 4,570.93, p < .001, and four-factor, youth χdiff(4)² = 225.15, p < .001; caregiver χdiff(4)² = 843.06, p < .001, alternative models. Modification indices and expected change coefficients did not indicate substantive points of strain in the five-factor models, and tests of model invariance uniformly supported the REACH structure across youth age, youth race, region, and caregiver language. CONCLUSIONS: Findings supported a five-factor structure that appears to generalize well across multiple groups, and they set the stage for advances in measurement and improved conceptualization of treatment engagement in research and clinical care. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).


Assuntos
Cuidadores , Hispânico ou Latino , Adolescente , Negro ou Afro-Americano , Cuidadores/psicologia , Criança , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Autorrelato
13.
Curr Opin Psychol ; 45: 101291, 2022 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35016086

RESUMO

Adolescent pregnancy and early motherhood pose significant socioeconomic and health risks in Sub-Saharan Africa, leading to considerable morbidity and mortality. To learn more about the needs of this population, we reviewed 24 articles featuring 21 samples covering 12,490 adolescents from 14 countries. Our coding revealed that adolescent mothers were studied more (85.7% of samples) than pregnant adolescents (61.9%). We summarized needs as per six categories. Resource needs were most prevalent, reported by 100% of samples, followed by ecology (85.7%), mental health (76.2%), medical (61.9%), other (61.9%), and education (33.3%). The most frequently reported resource needs were low income and unemployment. Low social support, low family functioning, and exposure to negative cultural norms were ecological needs prevalent in most samples. Among mental health concerns, depression was the most commonly reported problem, whereas other problems, such as anxiety, substance use, and suicidality, were reported much less frequently. HIV-positive status was the most frequently reported medical concern. Intervention developers should consider the range of challenges when designing psychosocial services for this population.


Assuntos
Período Periparto , Intervenção Psicossocial , Adolescente , África Subsaariana/epidemiologia , Feminino , Humanos , Saúde Mental , Gravidez , Apoio Social
14.
Prof Psychol Res Pr ; 53(4): 362-371, 2022 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37332624

RESUMO

We conducted a systematic review to characterize features and evaluate outcomes of cultural competence trainings delivered to mental health providers. We reviewed 37 training curricula described in 40 articles published between 1984-2019 and extracted information about curricular content (e.g., cultural identities), as well as training features (e.g., duration), methods (e.g., instructional strategies), and outcomes (i.e., attitudes, knowledge, skills). Training participants included graduate students and practicing professionals from a range of disciplines. Few studies (7.1%) employed a randomized-controlled trial design, instead favoring single-group (61.9%) or quasi-experimental (31.0%) designs. Many curricula focused on race/ethnicity (64.9%), followed by sexual orientation (45.9%) and general multicultural identity (43.2%). Few curricula included other cultural categorizations such as religion (16.2%), immigration status (13.5%), or socioeconomic status (13.5%). Most curricula included topics of sociocultural information (89.2%) and identity (78.4%), but fewer included topics such as discrimination and prejudice (54.1%). Lectures (89.2%) and discussions (86.5%) were common instructional strategies, whereas opportunities for application of material were less common (e.g., clinical experience: 16.2%; modeling: 13.5%). Cultural attitudes were the most frequently assessed training outcome (89.2%), followed by knowledge (81.1%) and skills (67.6%). To advance the science and practice of cultural competence trainings, we recommend that future studies include control groups, pre- and post-training assessment, and multiple methods for measuring multiple training outcomes. We also recommend consideration of cultural categories that are less frequently represented, how curricula might develop culturally competent providers beyond any single cultural category, and how best to leverage active learning strategies to maximize the impact of trainings.

15.
J Eval Clin Pract ; 28(4): 531-541, 2022 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34622536

RESUMO

RATIONALE, AIMS AND OBJECTIVES: A key consideration in designing scalable solutions for improving global mental health involves balancing the need for interventions to be uncomplicated for mental health workers (MHWs) and the need for the intervention to be widely applicable to many clients. Often these needs are in competition, since interventions are routinely simplified by removing procedures or reducing their dynamic responsivity, which in turn lowers their overall utility in serving large, clinically diverse populations. The principal aim of this pilot study involved evaluating the feasibility and acceptability of a brief strategy designed to delegate problem classification and practice selection to MHWs operating within a flexible, modular, cognitive behavioural protocol. A secondary aim involved gathering data on which to base a hypothesis regarding the potential effectiveness of this strategy. METHOD: Within an open trial, an educationally diverse sample of local MHWs in India (N = 18) reviewed fictional case vignettes, classified mental health problems, and then selected practices before and after a two-hour training that included a one-page decision-making resource. Feasibility was measured by assessing the integrity of the study protocol and training, the measurement and administration of questionnaires as well as study recruitment and completion. Acceptability of the intervention was measured by MHW-perceived performance, ease of use, value, importance, and intention for continued use. Decision-making accuracy was assessed by comparing MHWs' clinical decisions with criteria established through consensus among psychologists with expertise in modular protocols. RESULTS: Results suggested high feasibility and acceptability on all metrics. Secondary analysis revealed that MHW's decision-making accuracy and confidence also significantly improved, providing a basis for the hypothesis that this brief approach is useful for building MHW capacity in low-resource settings. CONCLUSION: Overall these findings provide initial support for these methods and potential training outcomes to test within a larger, randomized controlled trial.


Assuntos
Pessoal de Saúde , Saúde Mental , Estudos de Viabilidade , Humanos , Índia , Projetos Piloto
16.
Am J Psychother ; 75(2): 82-88, 2022 Jun 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34724809

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: This pilot study aimed to evaluate the relevance, feasibility, acceptability, and instructional efficacy of the Managing and Adapting Practice (MAP) curriculum for enhancing the teaching of psychotherapy to child and adolescent psychiatry (CAP) fellows. MAP is a system of resources and decision models that supports practitioners in selecting and implementing psychotherapeutic interventions for children and adolescents. The MAP curriculum includes modules to guide education about psychotherapeutic procedures (e.g., behavioral activation) common in evidence-based treatments for an array of childhood problems and to support development of competencies in assessment, treatment planning, and reflective practice. METHODS: Curriculum coding was used to examine the relevance of MAP's core components to the skills articulated in the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) CAP milestones. Feasibility, acceptability, and learning outcomes were examined after delivery of the MAP curriculum to 12 CAP fellows at two sites, with instructional features tailored according to faculty preferences and training program structure. RESULTS: Coding suggested that the MAP curriculum was relevant to 95% of the 21 ACGME CAP training subcompetencies. Feasibility was indicated by the successful delivery of 100% of the planned MAP curriculum across the two sites. Acceptability was supported by positive feedback from the CAP fellows, and psychotherapy knowledge increased significantly. Finally, case review scores (mean±SD=2.21±0.15) showed positive posttraining application of MAP to two patients and exceeded scores achieved by other samples of mental health professionals. CONCLUSIONS: This pilot study demonstrated the potential for the MAP curriculum to support CAP education. MAP's versatility as a curriculum supports broader adoption, with continuing rigorous empirical evaluation.


Assuntos
Psiquiatria do Adolescente , Internato e Residência , Adolescente , Psiquiatria do Adolescente/educação , Criança , Competência Clínica , Currículo , Educação de Pós-Graduação em Medicina/métodos , Humanos , Projetos Piloto , Psicoterapia
17.
J Clin Child Adolesc Psychol ; 51(4): 453-468, 2022.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34269632

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: The gap between rates of children's mental health problems and their participation in services highlights the need to address concerns related to engagement in mental health services more effectively. To identify, understand, and resolve engagement concerns appropriately requires effective measurement. In this study, we employed a multidimensional conceptual framework of engagement to examine the measurement of engagement in intervention studies focused on improving children's and/or families' engagement in services. METHOD: We coded 52 randomized controlled trials (RCTs) of interventions designed to enhance treatment engagement published between 1974 and 2019 to examine what engagement constructs have been measured, how these constructs have been measured, who has provided information about engagement, and when and why engagement measures have been administered. RESULTS: Attendance was measured in 94.2% of studies, and 59.6% of studies measured only attendance. Furthermore, most studies (61.5%) measured only one engagement dimension. One hundred twelve unique indicators of treatment engagement were used (61.6% measuring attendance). Infrequent measurement of youth (19.2% of studies) or caregiver (26.9%) perspectives was apparent. About half (54.7%) of measures were completed on one occasion, with 53.7% of measures completed after treatment was concluded. CONCLUSIONS: Results highlight how the field's measurement of engagement has focused narrowly on attendance and on interventions that improve attendance. We consider promising new directions for capturing the multidimensional, dynamic, and subjective aspects of engagement, and for leveraging measurement in research and practice settings to feasibly and effectively identify, monitor, and address engagement challenges.


Assuntos
Serviços de Saúde Mental , Adolescente , Cuidadores , Criança , Humanos
18.
Clin Superv ; 40(1): 88-111, 2021.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34045790

RESUMO

In this review, the authors examined supervision characteristics and practices associated with formative (e.g., skill development) and restorative (e.g., well-being) provider outcomes. We used qualitative review to summarize supervision characteristics associated with desired outcomes. Then, we applied a distillation approach (Chorpita et al., 2005) to identify practices associated with formative and restorative outcomes. The most common practices for promoting formative outcomes were corrective feedback, discussing intervention, and role play. Findings indicate several supervision strategies have demonstrated empirical support for improving formative outcomes. However, more rigorous research is needed in community settings, particularly for understanding which strategies improve restorative outcomes.

19.
Med Teach ; 43(1): 86-92, 2021 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32976733

RESUMO

PURPOSE: Although a growing literature describes how clinical competency committees (CCCs) make decisions about trainees' clinical performance, little is known about the resources these committees need to perform their work. In this pilot study, we examined key characteristics of CCC processes across generalist and surgical specialties. This study intended to clarify topic areas for further investigation. METHODS: A cross-sectional web-based survey of CCC chairpersons at two institutions was conducted in 2017. Survey items were designed to describe not only CCC work, including types of assessment data used and time spent discussing learners, but also resource needs such as faculty development, institutional support, and protected time for members. RESULTS: The response rate was 59% (16/27). Only 44% offered faculty development to members. There was strong support for the institution to assist with faculty development for CCC members (81.25%), workshops for program coordinators (87.5%) and optimizing residency management software to organize assessment data (81.25%). Most respondents did not receive protected time for their committee work (93.75%). CONCLUSIONS: Further studies are needed to elucidate whether CCC work varies across specialties and the associated committee resource needs. There may be opportunities for institutions to assist CCCs with resources across specialties.


Assuntos
Competência Clínica , Internato e Residência , Estudos Transversais , Educação de Pós-Graduação em Medicina , Humanos , Projetos Piloto
20.
Adm Policy Ment Health ; 48(2): 201-218, 2021 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32661787

RESUMO

Most mental health professionals encounter challenges to helping youth and families enroll and participate in mental health services. The empirical literature suggests that most engagement strategies are well-suited for certain types of engagement challenges. In this mixed-methods study, we examined whether mental health professionals reported using any solutions from the evidence base and, if so, the extent to which these procedures fit the engagement challenges they encountered. We surveyed all 244 mental health professionals working in a large urban school district about their experiences engaging youth and families in services. We coded professionals' written responses to open-ended questions about the challenges they encountered engaging youth and families in services, along with solutions they used to address these challenges. Most reported engagement challenges (83.3%) had a corresponding solution in the evidence base. Most reported solutions (86.5%) were practices found in the evidence base, yet most practices from the evidence base were infrequently nominated by professionals. Moreover, only 38.5% of professionals reported at least one solution that fit at least one of their challenges. In general, professionals reported using a narrow subset of engagement strategies from the literature, which often did not fit the engagement problems encountered. These results highlight opportunities for developing and disseminating a framework that explicitly coordinates evidence-based solutions matched to specific engagement challenges to support provider selection and application of engagement procedures and ultimately enhance youth and family engagement in services.


Assuntos
Serviços de Saúde Mental , Saúde Mental , Adolescente , Pessoal de Saúde , Humanos , Instituições Acadêmicas
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