keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38659009/trauma-informed-healthcare-leadership-evidence-and-opportunities-from-interviews-with-leaders-during-covid-19
#61
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sonia Rose Harris, Alexis Amano, Marcy Winget, Kelley M Skeff, Cati G Brown-Johnson
BACKGROUND: COVID-19 impacted the mental health of healthcare workers, who endured pressures as they provided care during a prolonged crisis. We aimed to explore whether and how a Trauma-Informed Care (TIC) approach was reflected in qualitative perspectives from healthcare leaders of their experience during COVID-19 (2020-2021). METHODS: Semi-structured interviews with healthcare leaders from four institutions were conducted. Data analysis consisted of four stages informed by interpretative phenomenological analysis: 1) deductive coding using TIC assumptions, 2) inductive thematic analysis of coded excerpts, 3) keyword-in-context coding of full transcripts for 6 TIC principles with integration into prior inductive themes, and 4) interpretation of themes through 6 TIC principles (safety; trustworthiness and transparency; peer support; collaboration and mutuality; empowerment, voice, and choice; and awareness of cultural, historical, and gender issues)...
April 24, 2024: BMC Health Services Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38657962/improving-data-infrastructure-for-person-centered-outcomes-research-on-intellectual-and-developmental-disabilities
#62
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Madjid Karimi, Rina Dhopeshwarkar, Frances Jiménez, Sofia Ryan, Emma Plourde
Individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD) continue to experience disparities in health and well-being despite improved provisions of person-centered care. Patient-centered outcomes research (PCOR) translates evidence into practice for meaningful outcomes. This piece describes findings from an environmental scan and stakeholder outreach to identify and prioritize opportunities to enhance IDD PCOR data infrastructure. These opportunities include developing a standardized research definition; advancing data standards for service systems; improving capture of IDD at point of care; developing standardized outcome measures; and encouraging Medicaid data use for IDD research...
May 1, 2024: American Journal on Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38654291/barriers-and-facilitators-to-collaborative-care-implementation-within-the-new-york-state-collaborative-care-medicaid-program
#63
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Erin LePoire, Molly Joseph, Ashley Heald, Danielle Gadbois, Amy Jones, Joan Russo, Deborah J Bowen
BACKGROUND: Since 2015, the New York State Office of Mental Health has provided state primary care clinics with outreach, free training and technical assistance, and the opportunity to bill Medicaid for the Collaborative Care Model (CoCM) as part of its Collaborative Care Medicaid Program. This study aims to describe the characteristics of New York State primary care clinics at each step of CoCM implementation, and the barriers and facilitators to CoCM implementation for the New York State Collaborative Care Medicaid Program...
April 24, 2024: BMC Health Services Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38652917/monitoring-persons-rights-to-equal-care-registered-nurses-experiences-of-caring-for-people-with-mental-ill-health-and-somatic-comorbidity-in-psychiatric-outpatient-care
#64
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Helena Antonsson, Sabine Björk, Emma Rezai, Camilla Sehlstedt, Jenny Molin
Persons with severe mental ill-health die early from preventable physical ill-health. Registered nurses in psychiatric outpatient care play a key role in improving persons' physical health, and it is important to examine how they view their responsibility, their experiences of care, and the obstacles they meet in providing person-centred care. The purpose of this study was to explore registered nurses' experiences of caring for persons with mental ill-health and somatic comorbidity in psychiatric outpatient care, using qualitative content analysis to analyze data from semi-structured interviews...
April 23, 2024: Issues in Mental Health Nursing
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38652342/mental-health-collaborative-care-in-brazil-and-the-economy-of-attention-disclosing-barriers-and-therapeutic-negotiations
#65
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Manuela Rodrigues Müller, Francisco Ortega
The introduction of mental health collaborative care (MHCC) is one of the strategies to scale up access to mental health care in primary health care in Brazil. This article investigates an experience of mental health collaborative care in the city of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. It is a qualitative study involving interviews with physicians and mental health professionals working in primary health care units located in the northern part of the city of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The aim is to examine the various strategies and negotiations that primary health care professionals deploy to identify mental distress and plan health care interventions...
April 23, 2024: Culture, Medicine and Psychiatry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38650490/effects-of-recreational-cannabis-legalization-on-mental-health-scoping-review
#66
REVIEW
Alexandra Fortier, Inès Zouaoui, Alexandre Dumais, Stéphane Potvin
OBJECTIVE: Recreational cannabis legalization (RCL) is expanding rapidly. RCL's effects on mental health issues are of particular concern because cannabis use is more frequent among people receiving psychiatric care and is associated with several psychiatric disorders. The authors conducted a scoping review to examine the evidence and discern gaps in the literature concerning the effects of RCL on mental health and to assess the factors responsible for an observed heterogeneity in research results...
April 23, 2024: Psychiatric Services: a Journal of the American Psychiatric Association
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38649267/mental-health-subjective-experiences-and-environmental-change
#67
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Juan Manuel Zaragoza Bernal
This article responds to Coope's call for the medical humanities to address the climate crisis as a health issue. Coope proposes three areas for progress towards ecological thinking in healthcare, with a focus on ecological mental health. The article emphasises the need to understand the cultural dimensions of mental health and proposes an interdisciplinary approach that integrates insights from the arts and humanities. It examines the impact of climate change on mental health, drawing on The Rockefeller Foundation - Lancet Commission on Planetary Health and recent studies...
April 22, 2024: Medical Humanities
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38648117/maternal-depressive-symptoms-and-mother-infant-co-sleeping-including-room-sharing-and-bedsharing-a-systematic-review
#68
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Elaine S Barry, Levita D'Souza
STUDY OBJECTIVES: Maternal depressive symptoms (MDS) affect most women during the first year postpartum. Mothers provide most of the nighttime care for infants, so studying the relationship between MDS and infant sleep location (ISL) is highly relevant to understanding maternal mental health over the first year of life and beyond. Infant sleep is studied by anthropologists, health care providers, and psychologists, with very little communication across disciplines. This review aimed to determine if there is a predictive relationship between MDS and ISL...
April 22, 2024: Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine: JCSM: Official Publication of the American Academy of Sleep Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38647499/you-belong
#69
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Victoria A Torres, Luz M Garcini, Eliot J Lopez
The author describes how she has earnestly struggled to find her fit in providing mental health services to Hispanic/Latino clients and the Latino communities that she belongs to. She wonders, if no one belongs, then who stands up for historically marginalized Latino communities? Personal and systemic biases and arbitrary criteria for being enough to serve Latino patients hurt providers and clients alike. Her work reminds her of the need to charge against stereotyping and racism to meet patients' needs regardless of skin color or linguistic abilities...
March 2024: Families, Systems & Health: the Journal of Collaborative Family Healthcare
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38647493/potential-parental-determinants-of-the-pace-of-evidence-based-practice-change-in-children-s-mental-health-care
#70
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Matthew M Davis, Marie E Heffernan, Lucy A Bilaver, Lauren S Wakschlag, Neil Jordan, Justin D Smith
BACKGROUND: Strength of evidence is key to advancing children's mental health care but may be inadequate for driving practice change. The Designing for Accelerated Translation (DART) framework proposes a multifaceted approach: pace of implementation as a function of evidence of effectiveness, demand for the intervention, sum of risks, and costs. To inform empirical applications of DART, we solicited caregiver preferences on key elements. METHOD: In March-April 2022, we fielded a population-representative online survey in Illinois households (caregivers N = 1,326) with ≥1 child <8 years old...
March 2024: Families, Systems & Health: the Journal of Collaborative Family Healthcare
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38647492/making-it-easi-for-pediatricians-to-determine-when-toddler-tantrums-are-more-than-the-terrible-twos-proof-of-concept-for-primary-care-screening-with-the-multidimensional-assessment-profiles-early-assessment-screener-for-irritability-maps-easi
#71
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lauren S Wakschlag, Allison J Carroll, Susan Friedland, John Walkup, Jillian L Wiggins, Nivedita Mohanty, Ellen Papacek, Sacha Bridi, Ryan Carroll, David Drelicharz, Zeba Hasan, Tara Kotagal, Matthew M Davis, Justin D Smith
BACKGROUND: Up to 20% of youth have impairing mental health problems as early as age 3. Early identification and intervention of mental health risks in pediatric primary care could mitigate this crisis via prevention prior to disease onset. The purpose of this study was to establish the feasibility and acceptability of implementing a brief transdiagnostic screening instrument in pediatric primary care for irritability and corollary impairment. METHOD: Five pediatric clinicians in a Midwest clinic implemented the Multidimensional Assessment Profiles-Early Assessment Screener of Irritability (MAPS-EASI) for toddlers (24-30 months) and their families...
March 2024: Families, Systems & Health: the Journal of Collaborative Family Healthcare
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38647490/a-vision-for-implementing-equitable-early-mental-health-and-resilience-support-in-pediatric-primary-care-a-transdiagnostic-developmental-approach
#72
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lauren S Wakschlag, Matthew M Davis, Justin D Smith
INTRODUCTION: Primary care is at the forefront of addressing the pediatric mental health (MH) crisis due to its broad reach to young children and prevention and health promotion orientation. However, the promise of the delivery system for population impact remains unrealized due to several barriers, including pragmatic screening, decisional uncertainty, and limited access to evidence-based services. METHOD: This article lays the conceptual foundations for the articles in this Special Section on Mental Health, Earlier in Pediatric Primary Care, which all apply a translational mindset to proposed strategies and solutions to overcome the barriers that have limited the potential of pediatric primary care for improving the MH and wellbeing of all children...
March 2024: Families, Systems & Health: the Journal of Collaborative Family Healthcare
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38647489/addressing-mental-health-earlier-in-pediatric-primary-care-introduction-to-the-special-section
#73
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ashley M Butler, Sara M George
Leading national health organizations have declared pediatric mental health an urgent public health issue. Pediatric primary care is an ideal setting to improve mental health in young children; however, various existing barriers limit the effective identification of social-emotional risk among toddlers. This special section of Families, Systems, & Health includes four articles that identify multilevel barriers and facilitators to population-level early childhood mental health screening, identification, and referral and describe implementation strategies that may be used to improve pediatric mental health...
March 2024: Families, Systems & Health: the Journal of Collaborative Family Healthcare
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38645637/family-fellowship-society-for-psychosocial-rehabilitation-services-1993-2019-a-self-help-movement
#74
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sinu Ezhumalai, Marimuthu Ranganathan
Family Fellowship Society for Psychosocial Rehabilitation Services is an initiative of families of persons with mental illness and with psychiatric disabilities. It has been advocating self-help movement on the part of the families who have been on the lookout for alternative care services. This venture has been technically supported by the mental health professionals at National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences, Bangalore. It is a collaborative effort of families and professionals to address the needs that have been felt by the consumers and the professionals...
March 2024: Journal of Psychosocial Rehabilitation and Mental Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38643777/medical-management-and-surgery-versus-medical-management-alone-for-symptomatic-cerebral-cavernous-malformation-care-a-feasibility-study-and-randomised-open-pragmatic-pilot-phase-trial
#75
JOURNAL ARTICLE
(no author information available yet)
BACKGROUND: The highest priority uncertainty for people with symptomatic cerebral cavernous malformation is whether to have medical management and surgery or medical management alone. We conducted a pilot phase randomised controlled trial to assess the feasibility of addressing this uncertainty in a definitive trial. METHODS: The CARE pilot trial was a prospective, randomised, open-label, assessor-blinded, parallel-group trial at neuroscience centres in the UK and Ireland...
April 17, 2024: Lancet Neurology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38639203/detection-of-and-response-to-gender-based-violence-a-quality-improvement-project-across-three-secondary-mental-health-services-in-london
#76
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Roxanne C Keynejad, Theo Boardman-Pretty, Sarah Barber, John Tweed, Emily Forshall, Alice Edwards, Joshua Shotton, Claire A Wilson
AIMS AND METHOD: Our team of core and higher psychiatry trainees aimed to improve secondary mental health service detection of and response to gender-based violence (GBV) in South East London. We audited home treatment team (HTT), drug and alcohol (D&A) service and in-patient ward clinical records ( n = 90) for female and non-binary patients. We implemented brief, cost-neutral staff engagement and education interventions at service, borough and trust levels before re-auditing ( n = 86), completing a plan-do-study-act cycle...
April 19, 2024: BJPsych Bulletin
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38638205/-we-ll-deal-with-it-as-it-comes-a-qualitative-analysis-of-romantic-partners-dyadic-coping-in-cystic-fibrosis
#77
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nancy Lau, Kathleen J Ramos, Moira L Aitken, Christopher H Goss, Krysta S Barton, Erin K Kross, Ruth A Engelberg
BACKGROUND: Although cystic fibrosis (CF) is a progressive, life-limiting, genetic disease, recent advances have extended survival, allowing persons with CF the time and physical and mental health to form romantic relationships. Previous studies have shown the importance of dyadic coping to positive psychosocial functioning and relationship satisfaction for people with serious chronic illness and their romantic partners, but little work has been done with persons with CF and their partners...
April 2024: Journal of Social and Personal Relationships
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38637133/over-30%C3%A2-years-of-step-the-pittsburgh-experience-with-first-episode-psychosis
#78
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Helen J Wood, Nev Jones, Shaun M Eack, K N Roy Chengappa, Konasale M Prasad, Christian Kelly, Debra Montrose, Nina R Schooler, Rohan Ganguli, Cameron S Carter, Matcheri S Keshavan, Deepak K Sarpal
AIMS: For over 30 years, combined research and treatment settings in the US have been critical to conceptualizing care for first-episode psychosis (FEP). Here we describe an early example of such a context, the Services for the Treatment of Early Psychosis (STEP) clinic, which is affiliated with the University of Pittsburgh. METHODS: We describe STEP's historical roots and establishment in the early 1990s; STEP's research and treatment contributions, alongside its growth and ongoing leadership...
April 18, 2024: Early Intervention in Psychiatry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38634977/introducing-compassionate-and-relational-enquiry-care-a-three-day-training-for-mental-health-clinicians-on-relational-ways-of-working
#79
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Russell Razzaque, Emma Mckenzie
Research shows that, in mental healthcare, empathy and active listening skills play a fundamental role in the therapeutic relationship. Despite this, clinicians receive little training in cultivating these qualities, and there is a dearth of training in therapeutic relationships and relational care in this field more generally. In response to this paucity of training, a new intensive three-day training programme has been developed called Compassionate and Relational Enquiry (CARE). The CARE training programme has recently been delivered to a number of mental health teams in different boroughs of an NHS Trust and has undergone several rounds of redevelopment...
April 18, 2024: Community Mental Health Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38634418/barriers-to-healthcare-access-and-experiences-of-stigma-findings-from-a-coproduced-long-covid-case-finding-study
#80
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Donna Clutterbuck, Mel Ramasawmy, Marija Pantelic, Jasmine Hayer, Fauzia Begum, Mark Faghy, Nayab Nasir, Barry Causer, Melissa Heightman, Gail Allsopp, Dan Wootton, M Asad Khan, Claire Hastie, Monique Jackson, Clare Rayner, Darren Brown, Emily Parrett, Geraint Jones, Rowan Clarke, Sammie Mcfarland, Mark Gabbay, Amitava Banerjee, Nisreen A Alwan
BACKGROUND AND AIM: Long Covid is often stigmatised, particularly in people who are disadvantaged within society. This may prevent them from seeking help and could lead to widening health inequalities. This coproduced study with a Community Advisory Board (CAB) of people with Long Covid aimed to understand healthcare and wider barriers and stigma experienced by people with probable Long Covid. METHODS: An active case finding approach was employed to find adults with probable, but not yet clinically diagnosed, Long Covid in two localities in London (Camden and Merton) and Derbyshire, England...
April 2024: Health Expectations: An International Journal of Public Participation in Health Care and Health Policy
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