Monash Centre for Health, Research and Implementation, School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia.
Centre for Educational Development, Appraisal and Research (CEDAR), Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Warwick, Coventry, UK.
Health Expect. 2022 Oct;25(5):2287-2298. doi: 10.1111/hex.13526. Epub 2022 May 24.
Pregnancy is a time of increased risk for developing or re-experiencing mental illness. Perinatal mental health screening for all women is recommended in many national guidelines, but a number of systems-level and individual barriers often hinder policy implementation. These barriers result in missed opportunities for detection and early intervention and are likely to be experienced disproportionately by women from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds, including women of refugee backgrounds. The objectives of this study were to develop a theory-informed, evidence-based guide for introducing and integrating perinatal mental health screening across health settings and to synthesize the learnings from an implementation initiative and multisectoral partnership between the Centre of Perinatal Excellence (COPE), and a university-based research centre. COPE is a nongovernmental organization (NGO) commissioned to update the Australian perinatal mental health guidelines, train health professionals and implement digital screening.
In this case study, barriers to implementation were prospectively identified and strategies to overcome them were developed. A pilot perinatal screening programme for depression and anxiety with a strong health equity focus was implemented and evaluated at a large public maternity service delivering care to a culturally diverse population of women in metropolitan Melbourne, Australia, including women of refugee background. Strategies that were identified preimplementation and postevaluation were mapped to theoretical frameworks. An implementation guide was developed to support future policy, planning and decision-making by healthcare organizations.
Using a behavioural change framework (Capability, Opportunity, Motivation-Behaviour Model), the key barriers, processes and outcomes are described for a real-world example designed to maximize accessibility, feasibility and acceptability. A Programme Logic Model was developed to demonstrate the relationships of the inputs, which included stakeholder consultation, resource development and a digital screening platform, with the outcomes of the programme. A seven-stage implementation guide is presented for use in a range of healthcare settings.
These findings describe an equity-informed, evidence-based approach that can be used by healthcare organizations to address common systems and individual-level barriers to implement perinatal depression and anxiety screening guidelines.
These results present strategies that were informed by prior research involving patients and staff from a large public antenatal clinic in Melbourne, Australia. This involved interviews with health professionals from the clinic such as midwives, obstetricians, perinatal mental health and refugee health experts and interpreters. Interviews were also conducted with women of refugee background who were attending the clinic for antenatal care. A steering committee was formed to facilitate the implementation of the perinatal mental health screening programme comprising staff from key hospital departments, GP liaison, refugee health and well-being, the NGO COPE and academic experts in psychology, midwifery, obstetrics and public health. This committee met fortnightly for 2 years to devise strategies to address the barriers, implement and evaluate the programme. A community advisory group was also formed that involved women from eight different countries, some of refugee background, who had recently given birth at the health service. This committee met bimonthly and was instrumental in planning the implementation and evaluation such as recruitment strategies, resources and facilitating an understanding of the cultural complexity of the women participating in the study.
怀孕是出现或再次经历精神疾病的高风险时期。许多国家的指南都建议对所有女性进行围产期心理健康筛查,但一些系统层面和个人层面的障碍常常阻碍政策的实施。这些障碍导致错失了发现和早期干预的机会,而且很可能不成比例地影响到来自文化和语言多样化背景的女性,包括难民背景的女性。本研究的目的是为在卫生机构中引入和整合围产期心理健康筛查制定一个基于理论和循证的指南,并综合实施计划和一个多部门伙伴关系的经验,该伙伴关系由围产期卓越中心(COPE)与一个大学研究中心之间建立。COPE 是一个非政府组织(NGO),受委托更新澳大利亚围产期心理健康指南,培训卫生专业人员并实施数字筛查。
在这项案例研究中,前瞻性地确定了实施障碍,并制定了克服这些障碍的策略。在澳大利亚墨尔本的一家大型公立产科服务机构实施了一个以健康公平为重点的针对抑郁和焦虑的围产期筛查试点计划,该服务机构为来自大都市的具有文化多样性的女性提供护理,其中包括难民背景的女性。在实施前和实施后评估中确定的策略被映射到理论框架中。制定了一份实施指南,以支持医疗保健组织的未来政策、规划和决策。
使用行为改变框架(能力、机会、动机-行为模型),描述了一个旨在最大限度地提高可及性、可行性和可接受性的真实示例的主要障碍、过程和结果。开发了一个方案逻辑模型来演示投入的关系,这些投入包括利益相关者咨询、资源开发和数字筛查平台,以及方案的结果。提出了一个七阶段的实施指南,可供在各种医疗保健环境中使用。
这些发现描述了一种以公平为导向、循证的方法,医疗保健组织可以使用这种方法来解决实施围产期抑郁和焦虑筛查指南的常见系统和个人层面的障碍。
这些结果展示了一种策略,该策略是基于澳大利亚墨尔本一家大型产前诊所的患者和工作人员的先前研究得出的。这涉及对来自该诊所的卫生专业人员进行访谈,如助产士、产科医生、围产期心理健康和难民健康专家以及口译员。还对在诊所接受产前护理的难民背景的女性进行了访谈。成立了一个指导委员会,以促进围产期心理健康筛查计划的实施,该委员会由来自主要医院部门、全科医生联络、难民健康和福利、非政府组织 COPE 和心理学、助产、产科和公共卫生方面的学术专家组成。该委员会每两周举行一次会议,以制定解决障碍、实施和评估该计划的策略。还成立了一个社区咨询小组,该小组由来自八个不同国家的女性组成,其中一些是难民背景,她们最近在该服务机构分娩。该委员会每两个月举行一次会议,为实施和评估提供了规划,例如招聘策略、资源,并促进了对参与研究的女性的文化复杂性的理解。