Bennett-Levy James, Singer Judy, DuBois Simon, Hyde Kelly
University Centre for Rural Health, University of Sydney, Lismore, Australia.
J Med Internet Res. 2017 Jan 11;19(1):e1. doi: 10.2196/jmir.6269.
With increasing evidence for the effectiveness of e-mental health interventions for enhancing mental health and well-being, a growing challenge is how to translate promising research findings into service delivery contexts. A 2012 e-mental health initiative by the Australian Federal Government (eMHPrac) has sought to address the issue through several strategies, one of which has been to train different health professional workforces in e-mental health (e-MH).
The aim of the study was to report on the barriers and enablers of e-MH uptake in a cohort of predominantly Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health professionals (21 Indigenous, 5 non-Indigenous) who occupied mainly support or case management roles within their organizations.
A 3- or 2-day e-MH training program was followed by up to 5 consultation sessions (mean 2.4 sessions) provided by the 2 trainers. The trainer-consultants provided written reports on each of the 30 consultation sessions for 7 consultation groups. They were also interviewed as part of the study. The written reports and interview data were thematically analyzed by 2 members of the research team.
Uptake of e-MH among the consultation group was moderate (22%-30% of participants). There were significant organizational barriers to uptake resulting from procedural and administrative problems, demanding workloads, prohibitive policies, and a lack of fit between the organizational culture and the introduction of new technologies. Personal barriers included participant beliefs about the applicability of e-MH to certain populations, and workers' lack of confidence and skills. However, enthusiastic managers and tech-savvy champions could provide a counter-balance as organizational enablers of e-MH; and the consultation sessions themselves appear to have enhanced skills and confidence, shifted attitudes to new technologies, and seeded a perception that e-MH could be a valuable health education resource.
A conclusion from the program was that it was important to match e-MH training and resources to work roles. In the latter stages of the consultation sessions, the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health professionals responded very positively to YouTube video clips and apps with a health education dimension. Therapy-oriented apps and programs may fit less well within the scope of practice of some workforces, including this one. We suggest that researchers broaden their focus and definitions of e-MH and give rather more weight to e-MH's health education possibilities. Developing criteria for evaluating apps and YouTube videos may empower a rather greater section of health workforce to use e-MH with their clients.
随着越来越多的证据表明电子心理健康干预措施在促进心理健康和幸福方面的有效性,一个日益严峻的挑战是如何将有前景的研究成果转化为服务提供环境。澳大利亚联邦政府在2012年发起的一项电子心理健康倡议(eMHPrac)试图通过多种策略来解决这个问题,其中之一是对不同的卫生专业人员队伍进行电子心理健康(e-MH)培训。
本研究的目的是报告在一群主要为原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民的卫生专业人员(21名原住民,5名非原住民)中,采用电子心理健康的障碍和促进因素,这些人员在其组织中主要担任支持或病例管理角色。
在为期3天或2天的电子心理健康培训项目之后,由2名培训师提供多达5次咨询会议(平均每次会议2.4次)。培训师顾问为7个咨询小组的30次咨询会议分别提供了书面报告。他们还作为研究的一部分接受了访谈。研究团队的2名成员对书面报告和访谈数据进行了主题分析。
咨询小组中电子心理健康的采用率适中(参与者的22%-30%)。采用过程中存在重大的组织障碍,这些障碍源于程序和行政问题、繁重的工作量、禁止性政策以及组织文化与新技术引入之间的不匹配。个人障碍包括参与者对电子心理健康在某些人群中的适用性的看法,以及工作人员缺乏信心和技能。然而,热情的管理人员和精通技术的倡导者可以作为电子心理健康的组织促进因素起到平衡作用;而且咨询会议本身似乎提高了技能和信心,改变了对新技术的态度,并引发了一种观念,即电子心理健康可以成为一种有价值的健康教育资源。
该项目得出的一个结论是,使电子心理健康培训和资源与工作角色相匹配非常重要。在咨询会议的后期阶段,原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民卫生专业人员对具有健康教育层面的YouTube视频片段和应用程序反应非常积极。面向治疗的应用程序和项目可能不太适合某些工作人员(包括这一群体)的实践范围。我们建议研究人员拓宽他们对电子心理健康的关注范围和定义,并更加重视电子心理健康的健康教育可能性。制定评估应用程序和YouTube视频的标准可能会使更多的卫生工作人员有能力与他们的客户一起使用电子心理健康。