Bird Jennifer, Rotumah Darlene, Bennett-Levy James, Singer Judy
University Centre for Rural Health-North Coast, School of Rural Health, University of Sydney, Lismore, Australia.
JMIR Ment Health. 2017 May 29;4(2):e17. doi: 10.2196/mental.7878.
In Australia, mental health services are undergoing major systemic reform with eMental Health (eMH) embedded in proposed service models for all but those with severe mental illness. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander service providers have been targeted as a national priority for training and implementation of eMH into service delivery. Implementation studies on technology uptake in health workforces identify complex and interconnected variables that influence how individual practitioners integrate new technologies into their practice. To date there are only two implementation studies that focus on eMH and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander service providers. They suggest that the implementation of eMH in the context of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander populations may be different from the implementation of eMH with allied health professionals and mainstream health services.
The objective of this study is to investigate how Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander service providers in one regional area of Australia used eMH resources in their practice following an eMH training program and to determine what types of eMH resources they used.
Individual semistructured qualitative interviews were conducted with a purposive sample of 16 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander service providers. Interviews were co-conducted by one indigenous and one non-indigenous interviewer. A sample of transcripts were coded and thematically analyzed by each interviewer and then peer reviewed. Consensus codes were then applied to all transcripts and themes identified.
It was found that 9 of the 16 service providers were implementing eMH resources into their routine practice. The findings demonstrate that participants used eMH resources for supporting social inclusion, informing and educating, assessment, case planning and management, referral, responding to crises, and self and family care. They chose a variety of types of eMH resources to use with their clients, both culturally specific and mainstream. While they referred clients to online treatment programs, they used only eMH resources designed for mobile devices in their face-to-face contact with clients.
This paper provides Aboriginal and Torres Strait islander service providers and the eMH field with findings that may inform and guide the implementation of eMH resources. It may help policy developers locate this workforce within broader service provision planning for eMH. The findings could, with adaptation, have wider application to other workforces who work with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander clients. The findings highlight the importance of identifying and addressing the particular needs of minority groups for eMH services and resources.
在澳大利亚,心理健康服务正在经历重大的系统性改革,除了患有严重精神疾病的患者外,电子心理健康(eMH)已被纳入所有提议的服务模式中。原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民服务提供者已被确定为将eMH培训并应用于服务提供的国家优先事项。关于卫生工作队伍采用技术的实施研究确定了影响个体从业者如何将新技术融入其实践的复杂且相互关联的变量。迄今为止,仅有两项实施研究关注eMH以及原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民服务提供者。这些研究表明,在原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民群体背景下实施eMH可能与在联合健康专业人员和主流卫生服务中实施eMH有所不同。
本研究的目的是调查澳大利亚一个地区的原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民服务提供者在参加eMH培训项目后如何在实践中使用eMH资源,并确定他们使用的eMH资源类型。
对16名原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民服务提供者进行了有目的抽样的个人半结构化定性访谈。访谈由一名原住民和一名非原住民访谈员共同进行。每位访谈员对部分访谈记录进行编码并进行主题分析,然后进行同行评审。随后将达成共识的编码应用于所有记录并确定主题。
发现16名服务提供者中有9名正在将eMH资源纳入其日常实践。研究结果表明,参与者使用eMH资源来支持社会包容、提供信息和教育、进行评估、制定病例计划和管理、进行转诊、应对危机以及自我和家庭护理。他们选择了多种类型的eMH资源供其客户使用,包括特定文化的和主流的资源。虽然他们会将客户转介到在线治疗项目,但在与客户的面对面接触中,他们仅使用为移动设备设计的eMH资源。
本文为原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民服务提供者以及eMH领域提供了研究结果,这些结果可能为eMH资源的实施提供信息并提供指导。它可能有助于政策制定者在更广泛的eMH服务提供规划中定位这一工作队伍。这些研究结果经过调整后可能更广泛地应用于与原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民客户合作的其他工作队伍。研究结果强调了识别和满足少数群体对eMH服务和资源的特殊需求的重要性。