调整合作护理模式,将行为健康护理纳入低障碍HIV诊所。

Implementation research and practice Pub Date : 2023-04-17 eCollection Date: 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1177/26334895231167105
Julia C Dombrowski, Scott Halliday, Judith I Tsui, Deepa Rao, Kenneth Sherr, Meena S Ramchandani, Ramona Emerson, Mark Fleming, Teagan Wood, Lydia Chwastiak
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引用次数: 1

摘要

背景:协作护理管理(CoCM)模式是一种基于证据的干预措施,用于将行为健康护理整合到非精神环境中。CoCM已在初级保健诊所进行了广泛研究,但在非常规诊所的实施,如为高需求、复杂患者提供护理的诊所,尚未得到很好的描述。方法:我们将CoCM应用于一家低障碍HIV诊所,该诊所为精神疾病、药物使用和住房不稳定程度高的患者群体提供无需预约的医疗服务。探索、准备、实施和维持模式在实施CoCM的各个阶段指导实施活动和支持。基于证据的干预措施的适应和修改报告框架指导了我们对CoCM的护理过程要素和结构要素的适应记录。我们使用多分量策略来实现自适应的CoCM模型。在本文中,我们描述了我们在实施的前6个月的经验。结果:需要调整CoCM模型的关键背景因素是诊所团队结构、缺乏预约、患者群体的高度复杂性,以及患者护理优先级相互竞争的时间限制,所有这些都需要模型具有很大的灵活性。护理过程要素进行了调整,以提高干预措施与环境的匹配度,但CoCM的核心结构要素得到了保留。结论:CoCM模型可以适用于比通常的初级保健诊所更需要灵活性的环境,同时保持干预的核心要素。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Adaptation of the collaborative care model to integrate behavioral health care into a low-barrier HIV clinic.

Background: The collaborative care management (CoCM) model is an evidence-based intervention for integrating behavioral health care into nonpsychiatric settings. CoCM has been extensively studied in primary care clinics, but implementation in nonconventional clinics, such as those tailored to provide care for high-need, complex patients, has not been well described.

Method: We adapted CoCM for a low-barrier HIV clinic that provides walk-in medical care for a patient population with high levels of mental illness, substance use, and housing instability. The Exploration, Preparation, Implementation, and Sustainment model guided implementation activities and support through the phases of implementing CoCM. The Framework for Reporting Adaptations and Modifications to Evidence-Based Interventions guided our documentation of adaptations to process-of-care elements and structural elements of CoCM. We used a multicomponent strategy to implement the adapted CoCM model. In this article, we describe our experience through the first 6 months of implementation.

Results: The key contextual factors necessitating adaptation of the CoCM model were the clinic team structure, lack of scheduled appointments, high complexity of the patient population, and time constraints with competing priorities for patient care, all of which required substantial flexibility in the model. The process-of-care elements were adapted to improve the fit of the intervention with the context, but the core structural elements of CoCM were maintained.

Conclusions: The CoCM model can be adapted for a setting that requires more flexibility than the usual primary care clinic while maintaining the core elements of the intervention.

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