儿童和青少年心理健康先驱方案的早期评价:一项快速混合方法研究。

Jo Ellins, Lucy Hocking, Mustafa Al-Haboubi, Jenny Newbould, Sarah-Jane Fenton, Kelly Daniel, Stephanie Stockwell, Brandi Leach, Manbinder Sidhu, Jenny Bousfield, Gemma McKenna, Katie Saunders, Stephen O'Neill, Nicholas Mays
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:儿童和青少年心理健康先驱者方案正在资助建立新的心理健康支持小组,在学校和继续教育学院工作。心理健康支持小组直接支持有“轻度至中度”心理健康问题的儿童和青少年,并与学校和大学工作人员合作,促进所有人的福祉。目标:伯明翰国家卫生和保健研究所、兰德公司和剑桥评价快速评价中心以及政策创新和评价研究股对“先行者”方案进行了早期评价,以审查该方案首批25个“先行者”地点的精神卫生支助小组的发展、实施和早期进展。设计:混合方法评估,包括三个工作包:1。建立基线,了解开拓者站点的发展和早期影响,包括对所有25个站点的关键信息提供者和参与教育设置进行两轮调查。2. 在五个有目的地选择的开拓者网站进行更详细的研究,包括与一系列利益相关者和儿童和年轻人的焦点小组进行访谈。3.确定范围并制定方案,以便对方案的成果和影响进行长期评估。实地调查于2020年11月至2022年2月进行。伯明翰大学心理健康研究所青年咨询小组参与了整个研究过程,包括与儿童和年轻人共同制作焦点小组。结果:在充满挑战的情况下,该方案的实施取得了实质性进展,人们对方案可能取得的成就持乐观态度。教育心理健康从业者的角色已被证明是受欢迎的,但网站报告说,在留住教育心理健康从业者方面存在挑战,人员流动导致心理健康支持团队人手不足,需要重新招聘。教育机构欢迎额外的心理健康支持,并报告了积极的早期成果,包括工作人员感到更自信,能够更快地获得关于心理健康问题的建议。与此同时,也有人担心,有些儿童的心理健康问题比“轻度至中度”更严重,但还没有严重到需要接受专家帮助的程度,而且所提供的干预措施对一些年轻人效果不佳。心理健康支持小组通常花更多的时间支持有心理健康问题的儿童,而不是与教育机构合作,制定“全校”的心理健康和福祉方法,一些地点的服务模式似乎更以临床为导向,强烈关注心理健康支持小组的治疗功能。局限性:尽管努力使参与最大化,但调查回复率相对较低,一些群体的代表性不如其他群体。我们没有能够收集到足够详细的数据来开发开拓者站点的类型学,正如计划的那样。结论:今后方案实施的主要经验包括:-精神健康支助小组是否应扩大对有更复杂和更严重精神健康问题的儿童和青年的支助。-如何平衡预防和早期干预的双重目标。-如何留住培训后的心理健康从业人员。未来的工作:研究结果对该计划的长期影响评估的设计具有重要意义,该计划将于2023年夏季开始。研究注册:伯明翰大学(ERN_19-1400 - RG_19-190)和伦敦卫生和热带医学学院(Ref: 18040)的伦理批准以及卫生研究管理局(IRAS 270760)的批准。资助:伯明翰、兰德和剑桥评估快速评估中心由国家卫生和保健研究所卫生服务和交付研究方案(HSDR 16/138/31)资助。政策创新和评估研究组由国家卫生研究院政策研究规划(PR-PRU-1217-20602)资助。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Early evaluation of the Children and Young People's Mental Health Trailblazer programme: a rapid mixed-methods study.

Background: The Children and Young People's Mental Health Trailblazer programme is funding the creation of new mental health support teams to work in schools and further education colleges. Mental health support teams directly support children and young people with 'mild to moderate' mental health problems and work with school and college staff to promote well-being for all. A new workforce of education mental health practitioners is being trained for the teams.

Objective(s): The National Institute for Health and Care Research Birmingham, RAND and Cambridge Evaluation Rapid Evaluation Centre and Policy Innovation and Evaluation Research Unit undertook an early evaluation of the Trailblazer programme to examine the development, implementation and early progress of mental health support teams in the programme's first 25 'Trailblazer' sites.

Design: A mixed-methods evaluation, comprising three work packages: 1. Establishing the baseline and understanding the development and early impacts of the Trailblazer sites, including two rounds of surveys with key informants and participating education settings in all 25 sites. 2. More detailed research in five purposively selected Trailblazer sites, including interviews with a range of stakeholders and focus groups with children and young people. 3. Scoping and developing options for a longer-term assessment of the programme's outcomes and impacts. Fieldwork was undertaken between November 2020 and February 2022. The University of Birmingham Institute for Mental Health Youth Advisory Group was involved throughout the study, including co-producing the focus groups with children and young people.

Results: Substantial progress had been made implementing the programme, in challenging circumstances, and there was optimism about what it had the potential to achieve. The education mental health practitioner role had proven popular, but sites reported challenges in retaining education mental health practitioners, and turnover left mental health support teams short-staffed and needing to re-recruit. Education settings welcomed additional mental health support and reported positive early outcomes, including staff feeling more confident and having faster access to advice about mental health issues. At the same time, there were concerns about children who had mental health problems that were more serious than 'mild to moderate' but not serious enough to be accepted for specialist help, and that the interventions offered were not working well for some young people. Mental health support teams were generally spending more time supporting children with mental health problems than working with education settings to develop 'whole school' approaches to mental health and well-being, and service models in some sites appeared to be more clinically oriented, with a strong focus on mental health support teams' therapeutic functions.

Limitations: Despite efforts to maximise participation, survey response rates were relatively low and some groups were less well represented than others. We were not able to gather sufficiently detailed data to develop a typology of Trailblazer sites, as was planned.

Conclusions: Key lessons for future programme implementation include: - Whether mental health support teams should expand support to children and young people with more complex and serious mental health problems. - How to keep the twin aims of prevention and early intervention in balance. - How to retain education mental health practitioners once trained.

Future work: The findings have important implications for the design of a longer-term impact evaluation of the programme, which is due to commence in summer 2023.

Study registration: Ethical approval from the University of Birmingham (ERN_19-1400 - RG_19-190) and London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (Ref: 18040) and Health Research Authority approval (IRAS 270760).

Funding: The Birmingham, RAND and Cambridge Evaluation Rapid Evaluation Centre is funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research Health Services and Delivery Research programme (HSDR 16/138/31). The Policy Innovation and Evaluation Research Unit is funded by the NIHR Policy Research Programme (PR-PRU-1217-20602).

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