Research & Development, War Child Holland, Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
Amsterdam Institute of Social Science Research, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
Epidemiol Psychiatr Sci. 2020 Nov 26;29:e189. doi: 10.1017/S2045796020001018.
Despite recent global attention to mental health and psychosocial support services and a growing body of evidence-support interventions, few mental health services have been established at a regional or national scale in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC). There are myriad challenges and barriers ranging from testing interventions that do not target priority needs of populations or policymakers to interventions that cannot achieve adequate coverage to decrease the treatment gap in LMIC.
We propose a 'roadmap to impact' process that guides planning for interventions to move from the research space to the implementation space.
We establish four criteria and nine associated indicators that can be evaluated in low-resource settings to foster the greatest likelihood of successfully scaling mental health and psychosocial interventions. The criteria are relevance (indicators: population need, cultural and contextual fit), effectiveness (change in mental health outcome, change in hypothesised mechanism of action), quality (adherence, competence, attendance) and feasibility (coverage, cost). In the research space, relevance and effectiveness need to be established before moving into the implementation space. In the implementation space, ongoing monitoring of quality and feasibility is required to achieve and maintain a positive public health impact. Ultimately, a database or repository needs to be developed with these criteria and indicators to help researchers establish and monitor minimum benchmarks for the indicators, and for policymakers and practitioners to be able to select what interventions will be most likely to succeed in their settings.
A practicable roadmap with a sequence of measurable indicators is an important step to delivering interventions at scale and reducing the mental health treatment gap around the world.
尽管最近全球关注心理健康和心理社会支持服务,并不断有证据支持干预措施,但在中低收入国家(LMIC),很少有心理健康服务在区域或国家层面上建立。存在着从测试不符合人群或政策制定者优先需求的干预措施,到无法实现足够覆盖率以缩小 LMIC 治疗差距的干预措施等诸多挑战和障碍。
我们提出了“影响路线图”流程,指导干预措施从研究领域转移到实施领域。
我们确定了四个标准和九个相关指标,可以在资源有限的环境中进行评估,以最大程度地提高心理健康和心理社会干预措施成功推广的可能性。这些标准是相关性(指标:人口需求、文化和背景契合度)、有效性(心理健康结果的变化、假设作用机制的变化)、质量(依从性、能力、出席率)和可行性(覆盖率、成本)。在研究领域,需要在进入实施领域之前确定相关性和有效性。在实施领域,需要持续监测质量和可行性,以实现并保持积极的公共卫生影响。最终,需要开发一个包含这些标准和指标的数据库或存储库,以帮助研究人员确定和监测指标的最低基准,并使政策制定者和实践者能够选择在其环境中最有可能成功的干预措施。
有了一系列可衡量指标的可行路线图,是在全球范围内提供干预措施和缩小心理健康治疗差距的重要步骤。