Service design for children and young people with common mental health problems: literature review, service mapping and collective case study.

Steven Pryjmachuk, Susan Kirk, Claire Fraser, Nicola Evans, Rhiannon Lane, Liz Neill, Elizabeth Camacho, Peter Bower, Penny Bee, Tim McDougall
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: The mental health of children/young people is a growing concern internationally. Numerous reports and reviews have consistently described United Kingdom children's mental health services as fragmented, variable, inaccessible and lacking an evidence base. Little is known about the effectiveness of, and implementation complexities associated with, service models for children/young people experiencing 'common' mental health problems like anxiety, depression, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and self-harm.

Aim: To develop a model for high-quality service design for children/young people experiencing common mental health problems by identifying available services, barriers and enablers to access, and the effectiveness, cost effectiveness and acceptability of such services.

Design: Evidence syntheses with primary research, using a sequential, mixed-methods design. Inter-related scoping and integrative reviews were conducted alongside a map of relevant services across England and Wales, followed by a collective case study of English and Welsh services.

Setting: Global (systematic reviews); England and Wales (service map; case study).

Data sources: Literature reviews: relevant bibliographic databases and grey literature. Service map: online survey and offline desk research. Case study: 108 participants (41 children/young people, 26 parents, 41 staff) across nine case study sites.

Methods: A single literature search informed both reviews. The service map was obtained from an online survey and internet searches. Case study sites were sampled from the service map; because of coronavirus disease 2019, case study data were collected remotely. 'Young co-researchers' assisted with case study data collection. The integrative review and case study data were synthesised using the 'weaving' approach of 'integration through narrative'.

Results: A service model typology was derived from the scoping review. The integrative review found effectiveness evidence for collaborative care, outreach approaches, brief intervention services and the 'availability, responsiveness and continuity' framework. There was cost-effectiveness evidence only for collaborative care. No service model appeared to be more acceptable than others. The service map identified 154 English and Welsh services. Three themes emerged from the case study data: 'pathways to support'; 'service engagement'; and 'learning and understanding'. The integrative review and case study data were synthesised into a coproduced model of high-quality service provision for children/young people experiencing common mental health problems.

Limitations: Defining 'service model' was a challenge. Some service initiatives were too new to have filtered through into the literature or service map. Coronavirus disease 2019 brought about a surge in remote/digital services which were under-represented in the literature. A dearth of relevant studies meant few cost-effectiveness conclusions could be drawn.

Conclusions: There was no strong evidence to suggest any existing service model was better than another. Instead, we developed a coproduced, evidence-based model that incorporates the fundamental components necessary for high-quality children's mental health services and which has utility for policy, practice and research.

Future work: Future work should focus on: the potential of our model to assist in designing, delivering and auditing children's mental health services; reasons for non-engagement in services; the cost effectiveness of different approaches in children's mental health; the advantages/disadvantages of digital/remote platforms in delivering services; understanding how and what the statutory sector might learn from the non-statutory sector regarding choice, personalisation and flexibility.

Study registration: This study is registered as PROSPERO CRD42018106219.

Funding: This award was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Health and Social Care Delivery Research programme (NIHR award ref: 17/09/08) and is published in full in Health and Social Care Delivery Research; Vol. 12, No. 13. See the NIHR Funding and Awards website for further award information.

为有常见心理健康问题的儿童和青少年设计服务:文献综述、服务规划和集体案例研究。
背景:儿童/青少年的心理健康在国际上日益受到关注。许多报告和评论都一致认为英国的儿童心理健康服务支离破碎、多变、难以获取且缺乏证据基础。对于焦虑症、抑郁症、注意力缺陷多动障碍和自残等 "常见 "心理健康问题的儿童/青少年服务模式的有效性及其实施的复杂性,人们知之甚少。目标:通过确定现有服务、获得服务的障碍和促进因素,以及此类服务的有效性、成本效益和可接受性,为遇到常见心理健康问题的儿童/青少年开发一个高质量服务设计模型:设计:采用循序渐进的混合方法设计,对原始研究进行证据综合。在绘制英格兰和威尔士相关服务地图的同时,还进行了相互关联的范围界定和综合审查,随后对英格兰和威尔士的服务进行了集体案例研究:全球(系统综述);英格兰和威尔士(服务地图;案例研究):文献综述:相关书目数据库和灰色文献。服务地图:在线调查和离线案头研究。案例研究:108 名参与者(41 名儿童/青少年、26 名家长、41 名工作人员),涉及 9 个案例研究地点:方法:两份综述均采用单一文献检索。服务地图来自在线调查和互联网搜索。从服务地图中抽取案例研究地点;由于 2019 年冠状病毒疾病,案例研究数据是远程收集的。年轻的合作研究者 "协助收集案例研究数据。采用 "通过叙述进行整合 "的 "编织 "方法,对综合综述和案例研究数据进行了综合:结果:从范围界定审查中得出了服务模式类型。综合评审发现了协作护理、外联方法、简短干预服务和 "可用性、响应性和连续性 "框架的有效性证据。只有协作护理具有成本效益证据。没有一种服务模式似乎比其他模式更容易被接受。服务地图确定了 154 项英格兰和威尔士服务。案例研究数据中出现了三个主题:支持途径"、"服务参与 "和 "学习与理解"。综合评述和案例研究数据被归纳为一个共同制作的模式,为有常见心理健康问题的儿童/青少年提供高质量的服务:局限性:"服务模式 "的定义是一个挑战。局限性:定义 "服务模式 "是一项挑战,有些服务举措太新,还没有被纳入文献或服务地图。2019 年冠状病毒疾病导致远程/数字服务激增,而这些服务在文献中的代表性不足。相关研究的缺乏意味着几乎无法得出成本效益结论:没有强有力的证据表明任何现有服务模式优于其他模式。相反,我们开发了一种共同制作、以证据为基础的模式,该模式包含了高质量儿童心理健康服务所需的基本要素,对政策、实践和研究都很有用:未来工作:未来工作的重点应该是:我们的模式在协助设计、提供和审核儿童心理健康服务方面的潜力;不参与服务的原因;儿童心理健康不同方法的成本效益;数字/远程平台在提供服务方面的优势/劣势;了解法定部门如何以及从非法定部门学到什么有关选择、个性化和灵活性的知识:本研究已注册为 PROSPERO CRD42018106219:本奖项由英国国家健康与护理研究所(NIHR)的健康与社会护理服务研究项目(NIHR奖项编号:17/09/08)资助,全文发表于《健康与社会护理服务研究》(Health and Social Care Delivery Research)第12卷第13期。更多奖项信息,请参阅 NIHR Funding and Awards 网站。
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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