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Examining the Feasibility and Acceptability of a Screening and Outreach Model Developed for a Peer Workforce

Acri, Mary; Frank, Samantha; Olin, S Serene; Burton, Geraldine; Ball, Jennifer L; Weaver, James; Hoagwood, Kimberly E
PMCID:4308989
PMID: 25642123
ISSN: 1062-1024
CID: 2612122

Will health care reform rescue families in crisis?

Kelleher, Kelly J; Hoagwood, Kimberly
PMCID:4394988
PMID: 25528122
ISSN: 1876-2867
CID: 1443712

Psychological Science and Innovative Strategies for Informing Health Care Redesign: A Policy Brief

Asarnow, Joan Rosenbaum; Hoagwood, Kimberly E; Stancin, Terry; Lochman, John E; Hughes, Jennifer L; Miranda, Jeanne M; Wysocki, Tim; Portwood, Sharon G; Piacentini, John; Tynan, Douglas; Atkins, Marc; Kazak, Anne E
Recent health care legislation and shifting health care financing strategies are transforming health and behavioral health (a broad term referring to mental health, substance use, and health behavior) care in the United States. Advances in knowledge regarding effective treatment and services coupled with incentives for innovation in health and behavioral health care delivery systems make this a unique time for mobilizing our science to enhance the success of health and behavioral health care redesign. To optimize the potential of our current health care environment, a team was formed composed of leaders from the Societies of Clinical Child & Adolescent Psychology, Pediatric Psychology, and Child and Family Policy and Practice (Divisions 53, 54, and 37 of the American Psychological Association). This team was charged with reviewing the scientific and policy literature with a focus on five major issues: (a) improving access to care and reducing health disparities, (b) integrating behavioral health care within primary care, (c) preventive services, (d) enhancing quality and outcomes of care, and (e) training and workforce development. The products of that work are summarized here, including recommendations for future research, clinical, training, and policy directions. We conclude that the current emphasis on accountable care and evaluation of the outcomes of care offer numerous opportunities for psychologists to integrate science and practice for the benefit of our children, families, and nation. The dramatic changes that are occurring in psychological and behavioral health care services and payment systems also require evolution in our practice and training models.
PMCID:5546314
PMID: 26430948
ISSN: 1537-4424
CID: 1790042

Outcomes of a Family Peer Education Program for Families of Youth and Adults with Mental Illness

Schiffman, Jason; Reeves, Gloria M; Kline, Emily; Medoff, Deborah R; Lucksted, Alicia; Hoagwood, Kimberly; Fang, Li Juan; Dixon, Lisa B
Family members of consumers with mental illness often play important roles in initiating and supporting treatment. Self-help programs such as the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) Family-to-Family Education Program (FTF) have been shown to provide a variety of benefits for family members. Despite recognizing the benefits of FTF, little is known about who may benefit most, and in what ways they might benefit. One group of interest is family members of younger consumers, a group shown to report more negative caregiving experiences and more depression and anxiety than caregivers of older consumers. The current study assesses whether relatives of youth (ages 8-18) differ in their response to FTF as opposed to relatives of adults (19 years and older). Results suggest that all members benefit from FTF. Family members of youth in FTF, however, reported gains more pronounced on their depressive symptoms, and negative perceptions and experiences, relative to family members of adults. The importance of peer support programs is discussed, as well as the specific usefulness of these programs to effectively address concerns of relatives of youth with serious mental health concerns.
PMCID:5548144
PMID: 28798497
ISSN: 0020-7411
CID: 5069882

Adoption of Clinical and Business Trainings by Child Mental Health Clinics in New York State

Chor, Ka Ho Brian; Olin, Su-Chin Serene; Weaver, Jamie; Cleek, Andrew F; McKay, Mary M; Hoagwood, Kimberly E; Horwitz, Sarah M
Objective: This study prospectively examined the naturalistic adoption of clinical and business evidence-informed training by all 346 outpatient mental health clinics licensed to treat children, adolescents, and their families in New York State. Methods: The study used attendance data (September 2011-August 2013) from the Clinic Technical Assistance Center, a training, consultation, and educational center funded by the state Office of Mental Health, to classify the clinics' adoption of 33 trainings. Adoption behavior was classified by number, type, and intensity of trainings. The clinics were classified into four adopter groups reflecting the highest training intensity in which they participated (low, medium, and high adopters and "super-adopters"). Results: A total of 268 clinics adopted trainings (median=5); business and clinical trainings were about equally accessed (82% versus 78%). Participation was highest for hour-long Webinars (96%) followed by learning collaboratives, which take six to 18 months to complete (34%). Most (73%-94%) adopters of business learning collaboratives and all adopters of clinical learning collaboratives had previously sampled a Webinar, although maintaining participation in learning collaboratives was a challenge. The adopter groups captured meaningful adopter profiles: 41% of clinics were low adopters that selected fewer trainings and participated only in Webinars, and 34% were high or super-adopters that accessed more trainings and participated in at least one learning collaborative. Conclusions: More nuanced definitions of adoption behavior can improve the understanding of clinic adoption of training and hence promote the development of efficient rollout strategies by state systems.
PMCID:4312734
PMID: 25082362
ISSN: 1075-2730
CID: 1090392

Encouraging and sustaining integration of child mental health into primary care: interviews with primary care providers participating in Project TEACH (CAPES and CAP PC) in NY

Gadomski, Anne M; Wissow, Lawrence S; Palinkas, Lawrence; Hoagwood, Kimberly E; Daly, Jeffrey M; Kaye, David L
OBJECTIVE: Project Training and Education for the Advancement of Children's Health (TEACH) provides training, consultation and referral support to build child and adolescent mental health (MH) expertise among primary care providers (PCPs). This study describes how TEACH engages PCP, how program components lead to changes in practice and how contextual factors influence sustainability. METHOD: Thirty PCPs randomly selected from 139 trained PCPs and 10 PCPs from 143 registered with TEACH but not yet trained completed semistructured interviews. PCP selection utilized purposeful sampling for region, rurality and specialty. Interviews were recorded, transcribed and analyzed using grounded theory. RESULTS: PCP participation was facilitated by perceived patient needs, lack of financial and logistic barriers and continuity of PCP-program relationships from training to ongoing consultation. Trained PCPs reported more confidence interacting with families about MH, assessing severity, prescribing medication and developing treatment plans. They were encouraged by satisfying interactions with MH specialists and positive feedback from families. Barriers included difficulties implementing screening, time constraints, competing demands, guarded expectations for patient outcomes and negative impressions of the MH system overall. CONCLUSIONS: Programs like TEACH can increase PCP confidence in MH care and promote increased MH treatment in primary care and through collaboration with specialists. Sustainability may depend on the PCP practice context and implementation support.
PMCID:4240770
PMID: 24973125
ISSN: 0163-8343
CID: 1368602

Mental health interventions in schools 1: Mental health interventions in schools in high-income countries

Fazel, Mina; Hoagwood, Kimberly; Stephan, Sharon; Ford, Tamsin
Mental health services embedded within school systems can create a continuum of integrative care that improves both mental health and educational attainment for children. To strengthen this continuum, and for optimum child development, a reconfiguration of education and mental health systems to aid implementation of evidence-based practice might be needed. Integrative strategies that combine classroom-level and student-level interventions have much potential. A robust research agenda is needed that focuses on system-level implementation and maintenance of interventions over time. Both ethical and scientific justifications exist for integration of mental health and education: integration democratises access to services and, if coupled with use of evidence-based practices, can promote the healthy development of children.
PMCID:4477835
PMID: 26114092
ISSN: 2215-0366
CID: 1641062

A Literature Review of Learning Collaboratives in Mental Health Care: Used but Untested

Nadeem, Erum; Olin, S Serene; Hill, Laura Campbell; Hoagwood, Kimberly Eaton; Horwitz, Sarah McCue
OBJECTIVE Policy makers have increasingly turned to learning collaboratives (LCs) as a strategy for improving usual care through the dissemination of evidence-based practices. The purpose of this review was to characterize the state of the evidence for use of LCs in mental health care. METHODS A systematic search of major academic databases for peer-reviewed articles on LCs in mental health care generated 421 unique articles across a range of disciplines; 28 mental health articles were selected for full-text review, and 20 articles representing 16 distinct studies met criteria for final inclusion. Articles were coded to identify the LC components reported, the focus of the research, and key findings. RESULTS Most of the articles included assessments of provider- or patient-level variables at baseline and post-LC. Only one study included a comparison condition. LC targets ranged widely, from use of a depression screening tool to implementation of evidence-based treatments. Fourteen crosscutting LC components (for example, in-person learning sessions, phone meetings, data reporting, leadership involvement, and training in quality improvement methods) were identified. The LCs reviewed reported including, on average, seven components, most commonly in-person learning sessions, plan-do-study-act cycles, multidisciplinary quality improvement teams, and data collection for quality improvement. CONCLUSIONS LCs are being used widely in mental health care, although there is minimal evidence of their effectiveness and unclear reporting in regard to specific components. Rigorous observational and controlled research studies on the impact of LCs on targeted provider- and patient-level outcomes are greatly needed.
PMCID:4226273
PMID: 24882560
ISSN: 1075-2730
CID: 1030562

Quality concerns in antipsychotic prescribing for youth: a review of treatment guidelines

Kealey, Edith; Scholle, Sarah Hudson; Byron, Sepheen C; Hoagwood, Kimberly; Leckman-Westin, Emily; Kelleher, Kelly; Finnerty, Molly
BACKGROUND: Antipsychotic prescribing for youth has increased rapidly, is linked with serious health concerns, and lacks clear measures of quality for pediatric care. We reviewed treatment guidelines relevant to 7 quality concepts for appropriate use and management of youth on antipsychotics: 1) use in very young children, 2) multiple concurrent antipsychotics, 3) higher-than-recommended doses, 4) use without a primary indication, 5) access to psychosocial interventions, 6) metabolic screening, and 7) follow-up visits with a prescriber. METHODS: We searched for clinical practice guidelines meeting the following criteria: developed or endorsed by a national body, published after 2000, and specific treatment recommendations made related to 1 or more of the 7 quality concepts. Sources included electronic databases, the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Web site, and stakeholder and expert advisory committee recommendations. Two raters reviewed the 11 guidelines identified, extracting treatment recommendations, including details that could support measure definitions, and ratings of strength of recommendation and evidence. RESULTS: All 7 quality concepts were strongly endorsed by 1 or more guidelines, and 2 or more guidelines assigned their highest strength of recommendation ratings to 6 of the 7 concepts. Two guidelines rated evidence, providing high strength of evidence for 2 quality concepts: psychosocial interventions and metabolic monitoring. CONCLUSIONS: Guidelines provide support for 7 quality concepts addressing antipsychotic prescribing for youth. However, guideline support is often based on strong clinical consensus rather than a robust evidence base.
PMCID:4486323
PMID: 25169461
ISSN: 1876-2867
CID: 1173692

Innovations in the Identification and Referral of Mothers at Risk for Depression: Development of a Peer-to-Peer Model

Acri, Mary; Olin, S Serene; Burton, Geraldine; Herman, Rachel J; Hoagwood, Kimberly E
This paper describes a feasibility study of a peer-delivered prevention intervention to identify mothers at high risk for depression and facilitate engagement in mental health services for their emotional health. Sixteen family peer advocates and their supervisors partnered with academic researchers over a period of six months to develop a four-session intervention that focused on identifying symptoms of depression, providing education about depression and treatment, actively linking caregivers to treatment for their own emotional health, and assisting caregivers in becoming active participants in their mental health care. Collaborating with peers to develop the model enhanced its perceived relevance and utility, and resulted in an intervention that was complimentary to their roles and the mission of peer-delivered support services. Peer/professional partnerships may be beneficial for enhancing the feasibility and acceptability of research efforts; the impact of peers' participation in the current project and the need for future research to develop and study peer-delivered models is discussed.
PMCID:4043384
PMID: 24910508
ISSN: 1062-1024
CID: 1062102