用基准法评估社区环境中青少年模块化心理治疗的实际实施情况。

Daniel M Cheron, Emily M Becker-Haimes, H Gemma Stern, Aberdine R Dwight, Cameo F Stanick, Angela W Chiu, Eric L Daleiden, Bruce F Chorpita
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引用次数: 1

摘要

背景:在社区环境中获得高质量的结果需要服务系统中许多活动的战略协调,包括家庭、临床医生、主管和管理人员。在现代实施试验中,治疗本身由治疗手册指导;但是,对服务系统其他部分的结构化支持可能仍然不够明确(例如,监督、规划和审查的行政政策、信息/反馈流动、资源供应)。本实施试验调查了当这些非治疗支持不是由研究团队组织的,而是作为可扩展的工业实施的一部分提供时,心理社会干预的效果如何,测试所取得的结果是否符合已发表的研究试验的基准。方法:在这项单臂观察基准研究中,共有59名社区临床医生接受了儿童模块化治疗方法(MATCH)治疗计划的培训。这些临床医生对166名6至17岁的青少年进行了MATCH治疗,这些青少年自然会接受心理治疗服务。与最初的MATCH试验相比,临床医生从治疗开发人员或研究团队那里得到的支持要少得多,而是依赖于明确的流程管理工具来促进实施。先前的MATCH随机对照试验被用来对当前计划的结果进行基准测试。客户改进的评估使用最高问题评估和简要问题监控。结果:对病人症状变化的分析表明,青少年经历的改善等于或优于已发表的研究试验的实验条件。同样,护理人员报告的结果通常与已发表的试验结果相当。结论:尽管必须谨慎地解释结果,但它们支持在正式研究或资助实施试验之外使用过程管理工具促进MATCH成功实施的可行性。此外,这些结果说明了基准作为一种评估工业实施工作的方法的价值。摘要:随机有效性试验包括临床医生和在社区环境中经常遇到的病例,同时继续依赖于研究团队的临床和行政指导。因此,该领域仍在努力了解支持可持续实施可能需要什么,以及在没有这些临床试验支持的情况下,在社区环境中大规模实施干预措施时将如何发挥作用。需要其他方法来描述和提供实施所需的临床和操作支持,并有效评估循证治疗的表现。将社区的研究结果与更严格的临床试验结果进行对比,就是这样一种方法。本文提供了两个主要的文献贡献。首先,它提供了一个例子,说明如何使用基准来评估儿童治疗模块化方法(MATCH)治疗计划在研究试验背景之外的执行情况。其次,本研究表明MATCH产生了与原始研究试验中所见的症状改善相当的症状改善,并描述了与此成功相关的实施策略。特别是,尽管与最初的试验相比,本研究中的临床医生没有那么严格的专家临床监督,但临床医生获得了支持实施的流程管理工具。这项研究强调了在社区环境中评估干预方案的效果的重要性。本研究还为流程管理工具的使用提供了支持,以帮助供应商有效实施。
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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Assessing practical implementation of modular psychotherapy for youth in community-based settings using benchmarking.

Background: Achieving high quality outcomes in a community context requires the strategic coordination of many activities in a service system, involving families, clinicians, supervisors, and administrators. In modern implementation trials, the therapy itself is guided by a treatment manual; however, structured supports for other parts of the service system may remain less well-articulated (e.g., supervision, administrative policies for planning and review, information/feedback flow, resource availability). This implementation trial investigated how a psychosocial intervention performed when those non-therapy supports were not structured by a research team, but were instead provided as part of a scalable industrial implementation, testing whether outcomes achieved would meet benchmarks from published research trials.

Method: In this single-arm observational benchmarking study, a total of 59 community clinicians were trained in the Modular Approach to Therapy for Children (MATCH) treatment program. These clinicians delivered MATCH treatment to 166 youth ages 6 to 17 naturally presenting for psychotherapy services. Clinicians received substantially fewer supports from the treatment developers or research team than in the original MATCH trials and instead relied on explicit process management tools to facilitate implementation. Prior RCTs of MATCH were used to benchmark the results of the current initiative. Client improvement was assessed using the Top Problems Assessment and Brief Problem Monitor.

Results: Analysis of client symptom change indicated that youth experienced improvement equal to or better than the experimental condition in published research trials. Similarly, caregiver-reported outcomes were generally comparable to those in published trials.

Conclusions: Although results must be interpreted cautiously, they support the feasibility of using process management tools to facilitate the successful implementation of MATCH outside the context of a formal research or funded implementation trial. Further, these results illustrate the value of benchmarking as a method to evaluation industrial implementation efforts.Plain Language Summary: Randomized effectiveness trials are inclusive of clinicians and cases that are routinely encountered in community-based settings, while continuing to rely on the research team for both clinical and administrative guidance. As a result, the field still struggles to understand what might be needed to support sustainable implementation and how interventions will perform when brought to scale in community settings without those clinical trial supports. Alternative approaches are needed to delineate and provide the clinical and operational support needed for implementation and to efficiently evaluate how evidence-based treatments perform. Benchmarking findings in the community against findings of more rigorous clinical trials is one such approach. This paper offers two main contributions to the literature. First, it provides an example of how benchmarking is used to evaluate how the Modular Approach to Therapy for Children (MATCH) treatment program performed outside the context of a research trial. Second, this study demonstrates that MATCH produced comparable symptom improvements to those seen in the original research trials and describes the implementation strategies associated with this success. In particular, although clinicians in this study had less rigorous expert clinical supervision as compared with the original trials, clinicians were provided with process management tools to support implementation. This study highlights the importance of evaluating the performance of intervention programs when brought to scale in community-based settings. This study also provides support for the use of process management tools to assist providers in effective implementation.

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