Aldridge Grace, Reupert Andrea, Wu Ling, Seguin Joshua Paolo, Olivier Patrick, Pringle Glenn, Yap Marie B H
Turner Institute for Brain and Mental Health, School of Psychological Sciences, Monash University, Melbourne, VIC 3800, Australia.
School of Educational Psychology and Counselling, Monash University, Melbourne, VIC 3800, Australia.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2024 Nov 30;21(12):1599. doi: 10.3390/ijerph21121599.
Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) are a major risk factor for mental disorders in children. Parenting interventions can mitigate the impact of family-level ACEs and subsequently improve young people's mental health. However, a substantial research-to-practice gap hinders access to, and uptake of, available interventions.
This study aimed to develop actionable strategies to support the implementation of an evidence-based, co-designed, technology-assisted parenting intervention by understanding potential barriers and facilitators from the perspectives of service providers working with families of children experiencing ACEs.
We conducted one-on-one interviews with 14 staff at a community health service (six managers, eight service providers). A theoretical thematic analysis was used. The Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR) guided the data collection and analysis of barriers and facilitators. Pre-implementation strategies were informed by The Expert Recommendations for Implementing Change (ERIC) compilation. The CFIR-ERIC matching tool was used to match the CFIR barriers identified by participants in this study with ERIC strategies to overcome these barriers.
Fourteen CFIR constructs were identified as facilitators, and eleven as barriers. By using the CFIR-ERIC tool, eleven strategies to mitigate the barriers were identified. Most strategies were aligned to the ERIC clusters Use evaluative and iterative strategies ( = 4) and Develop stakeholder interrelationships ( = 3).
The CFIR-ERIC approach offered relevant and concise pre-implementation strategies for addressing potential barriers to implementing a novel, co-designed, technology-assisted parenting intervention for parents of children with ACEs. The identified facilitators support the utility of co-designing interventions as an initial phase in bridging research-to-practice gaps. Healthcare settings aiming to innovate services with technology-assisted parenting interventions to improve child mental health can draw on findings from the current study to guide pre-implementation plans for innovative, technology-assisted parenting interventions to improve child mental health.
童年不良经历(ACEs)是儿童精神障碍的主要风险因素。育儿干预可以减轻家庭层面ACEs的影响,进而改善年轻人的心理健康。然而,巨大的研究与实践差距阻碍了人们获得和采用现有的干预措施。
本研究旨在通过从与有ACEs儿童家庭合作的服务提供者的角度了解潜在障碍和促进因素,制定可行的策略来支持实施一项基于证据、共同设计、技术辅助的育儿干预措施。
我们对一家社区卫生服务机构的14名工作人员(6名管理人员、8名服务提供者)进行了一对一访谈。采用理论主题分析法。实施研究综合框架(CFIR)指导了障碍和促进因素的数据收集与分析。实施前的策略参考了《实施变革专家建议》(ERIC)汇编。使用CFIR-ERIC匹配工具将本研究参与者确定的CFIR障碍与ERIC克服这些障碍的策略进行匹配。
14个CFIR构建体被确定为促进因素,11个为障碍。通过使用CFIR-ERIC工具,确定了11个减轻障碍的策略。大多数策略与ERIC集群“使用评估和迭代策略”(4个)和“发展利益相关者相互关系”(3个)一致。
CFIR-ERIC方法为解决针对有ACEs儿童的父母实施新型、共同设计、技术辅助育儿干预措施的潜在障碍提供了相关且简洁的实施前策略。确定的促进因素支持了共同设计干预措施作为弥合研究与实践差距的初始阶段的效用。旨在通过技术辅助育儿干预措施创新服务以改善儿童心理健康的医疗机构可以借鉴本研究结果,为创新的技术辅助育儿干预措施改善儿童心理健康的实施前计划提供指导。