Cook Alec, Hunt Renee, Silcox Jennifer, Canas Eugenia, MacDougall Arlene G
St. Joseph's Health Care London, Finch Family Mental Health Care Building, F5-362, PO Box 5777, Stn B London, ON, N6A 5A5, Canada.
Department of Childhood and Youth Studies, King's University College, 266 Epworth Avenue, London, ON, N6A 2M3, Canada.
BMC Psychiatry. 2025 Jun 4;25(1):578. doi: 10.1186/s12888-025-06864-7.
Like many other nations, the rates of mental illness among children and youth have risen. Youth and emerging adults (YEA) between the ages of 16 and 25, in particular, have the highest rate of mental health disorders of any age group leading clinicians and researchers to ponder new and innovative ways to treat mental ill health (1-2). Youth centred practices (YCP) have emerged as possible new approaches in youth mental health care to better treat YEA living with mental illness, but also to empower this population to take control of their wellbeing. Despite the growing use of the term 'youth-centred,' there is little consensus on what this looks like in mental health care for youth. Using research coming out of MINDS of London-Middlesex, we explore how mental health professionals, including clinicians, researchers, administrative staff, and trainees, understand the term YCP and how they implement youth-centredness in practice.
Using a Youth Participatory Action Research framework as a guide, MINDS' researchers worked alongside YEA research assistants in all phases of research. Participants were selected from a pool of known practitioners and mental health programs utilizing YCP, as identified by YEA research assistants. Qualitative focus group and interviews, developed using an appreciative inquiry approach, were conducted with 13 mental health care professionals, staff, and trainees to ascertain how they understand and practice YCP. Researchers conducted a codebook thematic analysis of the data: five themes and fourteen subthemes were identified.
Our analysis identified five main themes: (1) Acknowledging YCP's Role in Supporting YEA Mental Health; (2) Developing Authentic and Meaningful Relationships Between YEA and Care Providers; (3) Collaboration in Care: Engaging YEA as Active Agents in their Treatment; (4) Creation and Maintenance of Accessible Service to Facilitate YEA Engagement; and (5) Moving Beyond Tacit Knowledge to YCP as a Trainable Construct. Underlying each of these key components of YCP was a thread of recognition that systems of care for YEA must be responsive to the unique needs of those the system intends to serve. This process is seen as dynamic and fluid; often representative of societal change and growth, the specific needs of YEA will remain in flux and YCP approaches require continued reflexivity.
When YCPs are used in mental health care, YEA and their lived experiences are respected by trusted adults on their care team. At the core, YCPs are collaborative. There is a shift from the dynamic of "practitioner as expert" to one that provides YEA a sense of agency and autonomy to make informed decisions regarding their care.
与许多其他国家一样,儿童和青少年中的精神疾病发病率有所上升。尤其是16至25岁的青年及新兴成年人(YEA),其心理健康障碍发生率在所有年龄组中最高,这促使临床医生和研究人员思考治疗精神疾病的新方法和创新方法(1-2)。以青年为中心的实践(YCP)已成为青年心理健康护理中可能的新方法,不仅能更好地治疗患有精神疾病的YEA,还能使这一群体有能力掌控自身健康。尽管“以青年为中心”这一术语的使用越来越多,但在青年心理健康护理中它具体是什么样却几乎没有共识。利用伦敦-米德尔塞克斯精神健康研究(MINDS)的研究成果,我们探讨心理健康专业人员,包括临床医生、研究人员、行政人员和实习生,如何理解YCP这一术语以及他们在实践中如何落实以青年为中心。
以青年参与式行动研究框架为指导,MINDS的研究人员在研究的各个阶段都与YEA研究助理合作。参与者从YEA研究助理确定的使用YCP的已知从业者和心理健康项目中挑选。采用欣赏式探询方法开展了定性焦点小组和访谈,与13名心理健康护理专业人员、工作人员和实习生进行交流,以确定他们如何理解和实践YCP。研究人员对数据进行了编码本主题分析:确定了五个主题和十四个子主题。
我们的分析确定了五个主要主题:(1)承认YCP在支持YEA心理健康方面的作用;(2)在YEA与护理提供者之间建立真实且有意义的关系;(3)护理中的协作:让YEA作为积极参与者参与其治疗;(4)创建并维持便捷服务以促进YEA参与;(5)从隐性知识转向将YCP作为可培训的结构。YCP的这些关键组成部分之下都有一条共识,即针对YEA的护理系统必须响应该系统旨在服务的人群的独特需求。这一过程被视为动态且灵活的;YEA的具体需求往往代表着社会变革和发展,会不断变化,YCP方法需要持续反思。
在心理健康护理中使用YCP时,可以让YEA及其生活经历得到护理团队中值得信赖的成年人的尊重。从核心来看,YCP是协作性的。存在一种从“从业者即专家”的模式向能让YEA在护理方面有做出明智决策的能动性和自主权的模式的转变。