在校本实施研究和实践中优先考虑伙伴关系:应用ACCESS模式。

Siena K Tugendrajch, Rachel Comly, Samantha Rushworth, Ricardo Eiraldi, Courtney Benjamin Wolk, Torrey A Creed
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:学校是美国青少年心理健康服务的主要场所,也是增加获得心理健康护理机会的关键场所,特别是对低收入和历史上少数族裔社区的青少年而言。然而,在学校长期得不到充分服务的青少年中,实施循证实践仍然存在许多障碍。与社区伙伴建立强有力的合作对于成功实施至关重要。目的:这一概念概述提供了ACCESS模型作为学校合作培训和咨询工作的资源,与以前强调社区精神卫生和住院情况的应用程序形成对比。方法:根据我们组织数十年来与学校和社区成员合作,在服务不足的学校提供循证实践培训和咨询支持的经验,并反思我们与社区精神卫生机构的合作,在学校提供精神卫生服务,我们概述了一个实用的模式,供合作伙伴在学校环境中提供培训和实施支持。具体来说,我们描述了ACCESS模型(Creed等人,2014年;Stirman等人,2010年)在培训和咨询中与在服务不足的学校环境中工作的领导者、服务提供者和教育工作者合作的应用。ACCESS模型为培训师和实施者提供了评估和调整培训内容的指导,在初始培训中传达基础知识,提供咨询以促进学习和行为改变,评估工作样本以评估EBP的保真度,研究结果,并促进实践的长期维持。结论:ACCESS模型为学校合作实施EBP提供了一个实用的路线图,概述了每个步骤,并通过我们工作中的应用实例为心理学家提供了具体的指导。这个作者团队代表了ACCESS模型的共同开发者和三个不同的研究小组,他们与众多公立学校系统合作提供培训和咨询。在整个过程中,我们强调学校-学术伙伴关系如何支持在服务不足的学校实施。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Prioritizing partnerships in school-based implementation research and practice: Applying the ACCESS model.

Background: Schools are the primary context for mental health services for youth in the United States and a critical setting for increasing access to mental health care, especially for youth from low income and historically minoritized communities. However, numerous barriers to implementing evidence-based practices persist for chronically underserved youth in schools. Establishing strong collaborations with community partners is essential for successful implementation.

Objective: This conceptual overview offers the ACCESS model as a resource for school-partnered training and consultation efforts, in contrast to previous applications that emphasized community mental health and inpatient contexts.

Method: Drawing from our groups' collective decades of partnering with school and community members to deliver evidence-based practice training and consultation support in underserved schools and reflecting on our collaborations with community mental health agencies contracted to provide mental health services in schools, we outline a practical model for partners to provide training and implementation support in the school context. Specifically, we have described applications of the ACCESS model (Creed et al., 2014; Stirman et al., 2010) in training and consultation in partnership with leaders, service providers, and educators working in underserved school settings. The ACCESS model provides guidance for trainers and implementers to Assess and adapt training content, Convey the basics during initial training, provide Consultation to facilitate learning and behavior change, Evaluate work samples to assess EBP fidelity, Study outcomes, and foster Sustainment of practices over time.

Conclusion: The ACCESS model offers a practical roadmap for school-partnered EBP implementation, outlining each step and providing concrete guidance for psychologists with applied examples from our work. This authorship team represents co-developers of the ACCESS model and three distinct research groups that have provided training and consultation in partnership with numerous public-school systems. Throughout, we emphasize how school-academic partnerships can support implementation in underserved schools.

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