Department of Psychiatry, McGill University, Montréal, Québec, Canada.
ACCESS Open Minds (Pan-Canadian Youth Mental Health Services Research Network), Douglas Mental Health University Institute, Montréal, Québec, Canada.
BMC Psychiatry. 2019 Sep 5;19(1):273. doi: 10.1186/s12888-019-2232-2.
Many Canadian adolescents and young adults with mental health problems face delayed detection, long waiting lists, poorly accessible services, care of inconsistent quality and abrupt or absent inter-service transitions. To address these issues, ACCESS Open Minds, a multi-stakeholder network, is implementing and systematically evaluating a transformation of mental health services for youth aged 11 to 25 at 14 sites across Canada. The transformation plan has five key foci: early identification, rapid access, appropriate care, the elimination of age-based transitions between services, and the engagement of youth and families.
The ACCESS Open Minds Research Protocol has multiple components including a minimum evaluation protocol and a stepped-wedge cluster randomized trial, that are detailed in this paper. Additional components include qualitative methods and cost-effectiveness analyses. The services transformation is being evaluated at all sites via a minimum evaluation protocol. Six sites are participating in the stepped-wedge trial whereby the intervention (a service transformation along the key foci) was rolled out in three waves, each commencing six months apart. Two sites, one high-population and one low-population, were randomly assigned to each of the three waves, i.e., randomization was stratified by population size. Our primary hypotheses pertain to increased referral numbers, and reduced wait times to initial assessment and to the commencement of appropriate care. Secondary hypotheses pertain to simplified pathways to care; improved clinical, functional and subjective outcomes; and increased satisfaction among youth and families. Quantitative measures addressing these hypotheses are being used to determine the effectiveness of the intervention.
Data from our overall research strategy will help test the effectiveness of the ACCESS Open Minds transformation, refine it further, and inform its scale-up. The process by which our research strategy was developed has implications for the practice of research itself in that it highlights the need to actively engage all stakeholder groups and address unique considerations in designing evaluations of complex healthcare interventions in multiple, diverse contexts. Our approach will generate both concrete evidence and nuanced insights, including about the challenges of conducting research in real-world settings. More such innovative approaches are needed to advance youth mental health services research.
Clinicaltrials.gov, ISRCTN23349893 (Retrospectively registered: 16/02/2017).
许多加拿大青少年和年轻人患有心理健康问题,面临着发现延迟、长时间的等待名单、服务难以获得、服务质量参差不齐、服务之间的过渡突然或缺失等问题。为了解决这些问题,ACCESS Open Minds 是一个多利益相关者网络,正在加拿大 14 个地点实施并系统评估一项针对 11 至 25 岁青少年的心理健康服务转型。该转型计划有五个重点:早期识别、快速获得、适当的护理、消除基于年龄的服务之间的过渡以及青少年和家庭的参与。
ACCESS Open Minds 研究方案有多个组成部分,包括最低评估方案和逐步楔形集群随机试验,本文详细介绍了这些方案。其他组成部分包括定性方法和成本效益分析。该服务转型正在所有地点通过最低评估方案进行评估。六个地点正在参与逐步楔形试验,干预措施(沿着重点的服务转型)分三波推出,每波相隔六个月。两个地点,一个人口多,一个人口少,被随机分配到三个波中的每一个,即按人口规模分层随机化。我们的主要假设涉及增加转诊人数,减少初始评估和开始适当护理的等待时间。次要假设涉及简化护理途径;改善临床、功能和主观结果;以及增加青少年和家庭的满意度。用于确定干预措施有效性的定量措施正在解决这些假设。
我们整体研究策略的数据将有助于测试 ACCESS Open Minds 转型的有效性,进一步改进它,并为其推广提供信息。我们研究策略的制定过程对研究本身的实践具有启示意义,因为它强调需要积极参与所有利益相关者群体,并在多个不同背景下设计复杂医疗干预措施的评估时解决独特的考虑因素。我们的方法将产生具体的证据和细微的见解,包括在真实环境中进行研究的挑战。需要更多这种创新方法来推进青少年心理健康服务研究。
Clinicaltrials.gov,ISRCTN23349893(追溯注册:2017 年 2 月 16 日)。