Williams Tricia S, Deotto Angela, Greenblatt Andrea, Fabiano Giulia F, Green Rivka, Linga-Easwaran Janaksha, Anagnostou Evdokia, Crosbie Jennifer, Kelley Elizabeth, Miller Steven P, Nicolson Rob, Rosart Jennifer, Wade Shari L, Barwick Melanie
Department of Psychology, Neurosciences, & Mental Health, The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Canada.
Department of Psychiatry, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada.
Implement Res Pract. 2025 Jun 19;6:26334895251346816. doi: 10.1177/26334895251346816. eCollection 2025 Jan-Dec.
Clinicians, health care organizations, and families demand better and more accessible children's mental health services with greater patient engagement. The I-InTERACT-North program was developed for children following traumatic brain injury and adapted for a transdiagnostic neurological and neurodevelopmental focus, with a recent transition to a stepped-care model. To date, the program has been exclusively provided within research studies; however, demand for its clinical use is growing. Implementation frameworks provide essential guidance regarding facilitators and barriers of clinical implementation under real-world conditions. Similarly, intersectionality evaluation can provide insights to develop equitable and inclusive health care practices. Informed by the Consolidated Framework of Implementation Research 2.0 (CFIR) and recent intersectionality supplement, the objectives were to examine the perspectives of parents/caregivers and clinical partners involved in the I-InTERACT-North program to identify (a) facilitators and barriers to inform the scale and spread of the program, and (b) equity, diversity, and inclusion (EDI) considerations to integrate in future clinical implementation.
This study used a qualitative descriptive design with focus group methodology. Participants included parents/caregivers and clinical partners. Semi-structured focus groups were conducted virtually. Focus group data were coded inductively and deductively using CFIR 2.0. The team reflected on intersectionality in the data, coding results, and broader context of the program's history.
Positive perceptions of the innovation's relevance and adaptability were echoed across focus groups. Prominent facilitators included the program's adaptability, personalized, flexible format, and knowledge dissemination. Barriers included geography, technological accessibility, and workflow, with participants stressing the importance of tailoring to culture, language, and neurodiversity. Feedback from participants aligned with 10 reflective prompts highlighted within the CFIR intersectionality supplement pertaining to families' intersecting categories, diverse intervention experiences, and information access.
Identified facilitators of I-InTERACT-North implementation extended across program knowledge sharing and recruitment. Recommendations included directions for clinical and system integration to facilitate scalability.
临床医生、医疗保健机构和家庭都需要提供更好且更易获得的儿童心理健康服务,同时提高患者的参与度。I-InTERACT-North项目最初是为创伤性脑损伤后的儿童开发的,后来调整为以跨诊断神经学和神经发育为重点,最近又过渡到了逐步照护模式。到目前为止,该项目仅在研究中提供;然而,其临床应用的需求正在增长。实施框架为现实条件下临床实施的促进因素和障碍提供了重要指导。同样,交叉性评估可以为制定公平和包容的医疗保健实践提供见解。基于实施研究综合框架2.0(CFIR)和最近的交叉性补充内容,本研究的目的是考察参与I-InTERACT-North项目的家长/照顾者和临床合作伙伴的观点,以确定:(a)促进项目推广和扩大规模的促进因素和障碍;(b)在未来临床实施中要纳入的公平、多样性和包容性(EDI)考量因素。
本研究采用了基于焦点小组方法的定性描述性设计。参与者包括家长/照顾者和临床合作伙伴。通过虚拟方式进行半结构化焦点小组讨论。焦点小组数据使用CFIR 2.0进行归纳和演绎编码。研究团队对数据、编码结果以及该项目历史的更广泛背景中的交叉性进行了反思。
各焦点小组都对该创新的相关性和适应性给予了积极评价。突出的促进因素包括项目的适应性、个性化、灵活的形式以及知识传播。障碍包括地理位置、技术可及性和工作流程,参与者强调了根据文化、语言和神经多样性进行调整的重要性。参与者的反馈与CFIR交叉性补充内容中强调的10条反思提示一致,这些提示涉及家庭的交叉类别、多样的干预经历和信息获取。
确定的I-InTERACT-North项目实施的促进因素涵盖了项目知识共享和招募等方面。建议包括临床和系统整合的方向,以促进项目的可扩展性。