BackgroundUnderstanding program leader perspectives on the sustainment of evidence-based practice (EBP) in community mental health settings is essential to improving implementation. To date, however, much of the literature has focused on direct service provider perspectives on EBP implementation. The aim of this mixed-method study was to identify factors associated with the sustainment of multiple EBPs within a system-driven implementation effort in children’s mental health services.MethodsData were gathered from 186 leaders at 59 agencies within the Los Angeles County Department of Mental Health who were contracted to deliver one of six EBPs within the Prevention and Early Intervention initiative.ResultsMulti-level analyses of quantitative survey data (N = 186) revealed a greater probability of leader-reported EBP sustainment in large agencies and when leaders held more positive perceptions toward the EBP. Themes from semi-structured qualitative interviews conducted with a subset of survey participants (n = 47) expanded quantitative findings by providing detail on facilitating conditions in larger agencies and aspects of EBP fit that were perceived to lead to greater sustainment, including perceived fit with client needs, implementation requirements, aspects of the organizational workforce, availability of trainings, and overall therapist attitudes about EBPs.ConclusionsFindings inform EBP implementation efforts regarding decisions around organizational-level supports and promotion of EBP fit.
The themes provide specific direction for enhancements to AIM HI to maximize engagement of Latinx families. The themes also have broader implications for intervention development and community implementation including refinement of EBPs to facilitate fit and sustained implementation. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2018 APA, all rights reserved).
Embedded within a Hybrid Type 1 randomized effectivenessimplementation trial in publicly funded mental health services, the current study identified stakeholder recommendations to inform cultural adaptations to An Individualized Mental Health Intervention for Autism Spectrum Disorder (AIM HI) for Latinx and Spanish-speaking families. Recommendations were collected through focus groups with therapists (n = 17) and semistructured interviews with Latinx parents (n = 29). Relevant themes were identified through a rapid assessment analysis process and thematic coding of interviews. Adaptations were classified according to the Framework for Reporting Adaptations and Modifications-Enhanced (FRAME) to facilitate fit, acceptability, and sustained implementation of AIM HI and classify the content, nature, and goals of the adaptations.Recommended adaptations were classified through FRAME as tailoring training and intervention materials, changing packaging or materials, extending intervention pacing, and integrating supplemental training strategies. Goals for adaptations included improving fit for stakeholders, increasing parent engagement, and enhancing intervention effectiveness. The current study illustrates the process of embedding an iterative process of intervention adaptation within a hybrid effectiveness-implementation trial. The next steps in this study are to integrate findings with implementation process data from the parent trial to develop a cultural enhancement to AIM HI and test the enhancement in a Hybrid Type 3 implementation-effectiveness trial.
Youth in marginalized communities who “strive” to rise above adversity, including systemic racism and poverty, are considered “resilient.” African-American, Latinx, and Asian-American youth often achieve admirable academic success despite limited social capital and high early life stress by adopting a “striving persistent behavioral style” (SPBS). SPBS may be supported by family socialization processes that facilitate reliance on self-regulation processes. Unfortunately, a young person’s resilience in one domain (i.e., academic) can come at a cost in other domains, including physical and mental health morbidities that are under-identified and under-treated. Indeed, research suggests a link between SPBS in the face of adversity and later health morbidities among ethnic minority youth. Herein, we describe SPBS as an adaptation to minority stress that not only promotes social mobility but may also stoke physical and mental health disparities. We review how family processes related to academic, emotional, and ethnic-racial socialization can facilitate the striving persistent behavioral style. We emphasize the double bind that ethnic minority families are caught in and discuss directions for future research and clinical implications for individual and family-level interventions. While needed, we argue that individual and family-level interventions represent a near-term work around. Solutions and factors that shape the need for SPBS and its cost must be addressed structurally.
and Child and Adolescent Services Research CenterObjective: This study investigated a quality indicator for children's mental health, caregiver attendance in youth psychotherapy sessions, within a system-driven implementation of multiple evidence-based practices (EBPs) in children's community mental health services. Method: Administrative claims from nine fiscal years were analyzed to characterize and predict caregiver attendance. Data included characteristics of therapists (n = 8,626), youth clients (n = 134,368), sessions (e.g., individual, family), and the EBP delivered. Clients were primarily Latinx (63%), male (54%) and mean age was 11; they presented with a range of mental health problems. Threelevel mixed models were conducted to examine the association between therapist, youth, service, EBP characteristics and caregiver attendance. Results: Caregivers attended, on average, 46.0% of sessions per client for the full sample and 59.6% of sessions for clients who were clinically indicated, based on age and presenting problem, to receive caregiver-focused treatment.
The implementation of evidence-based practices (EBPs) in community mental health settings for youths has consistently yielded weakened effects compared with controlled trials. There is a need to feasibly measure the quality of large-scale implementation efforts to inform improvement targets. This study used therapist-reported caregiver attendance in treatment sessions as a quality indicator in the community implementation of EBPs.Methods: Data were collected from therapists practicing in agencies contracted to provide publicly funded children's mental health services following a system-driven implementation of multiple EBPs. Community therapists (N=101) provided information about youth clients (N=267) and psychotherapy sessions (N=685). Multivariable binomial logistic regressions were conducted to examine associations between caregiver attendance and therapist factors (e.g., licensure status, education), youth factors (e.g., gender, age), and the type of EBP delivered.Results: Caregiver attendance occurred in 42% of sessions. The following factors were associated with increased odds of caregiver attendance: younger client age, male sex of client, externalizing presenting problem, and delivery of an EBP that prescribes caregiver attendance at all sessions. Caregiver attendance at sessions targeting trauma or externalizing disorders appeared to explain the differences between boys and girls in levels of caregiver engagement.Conclusions: Overall, the patterns of actual caregiver attendance appeared consistent with empirically informed practice parameters for involvement of caregivers in treatment. Still, the rates of caregiver attendance in externalizingfocused sessions were suboptimal, and the gender difference in these rates-which clearly disfavored girls-suggests targeted areas for quality improvement. Potential reasons for these quality gaps are discussed.
Objective: Community therapists inevitably adapt evidence-based practices (EBPs) to meet the needs of their clients and practice settings. Yet, the implications of spontaneous, therapist-driven adaptations for EBP implementation outcomes are not well understood. We used a sequential QUAN → qual mixed-methods design to examine how different types of therapist-described adaptations were associated with observerrated extensiveness of therapist delivery of EBP content and technique strategies at the session level. Method: Data were drawn from an observational study of a system-driven implementation of multiple EBPs into public children's mental health services. Community therapists (n = 103) described adaptations they made in 680 sessions with 273 clients (50.92% female, 49.08% male, M age = 9.72 years, 70.70% Hispanic/ Latinx). Coders classified therapist-described adaptations into five types: (a) Modifying Presentation, (b) Integrating, (c) Extending, (d) Reducing, and (e) Generalizing. Independent observers rated the extensiveness of EBP strategy delivery from session recordings using the EBP Concordant Care Assessment (ECCA) Observational Coding System. Results: Quantitative analyses using multilevel regression revealed that Modifying Presentation adaptations were associated with higher extensiveness of EBP technique delivery, whereas Extending adaptations were associated with lower extensiveness of EBP content and technique delivery. Qualitative analysis of adaptation descriptions identified explanations for the quantitative findings. Conclusions: Findings suggest that Modifying Presentation adaptations, associated with higher extensiveness, involved creative use of activities and materials, language modification, and personalization of EBP content to meet clients' diverse needs, whereas Extending adaptations, associated with lower extensiveness, involved slowing EBP pacing in response to client challenges. Implications for provider training are discussed.What is the public health significance of this article? Community therapists adapt evidence-based practices (EBPs) when implemented in public children's mental health services, yet how such adaptations impact EBP delivery is unclear. Findings from the present study suggest that sessions in which community therapists tailored presentation of EBP concepts in creative ways to meet clients' diverse needs were associated with higher extensiveness of EBP technique delivery. In contrast, sessions in which therapists slowed down intervention pacing and relied on repetition of didactic content were associated with lower extensiveness of EBP content and technique delivery. These findings may have implications for the targeted design of supportive training strategies in the community implementation of EBPs for diverse youth.
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