| Literature DB >> 27019639 |
Abstract
Increasingly, the potential for school mental health programming to enhance the well-being of children and youth is being recognized and realized. When evidence-based practices in mental health promotion and prevention are adopted in a whole school manner, students show positive social emotional and academic benefits. These findings have stimulated a proliferation of mental well-being programming for Canadian schools, with variability across offerings in terms of supporting evidence, costs and ease of implementation. In the absence of coordination and guidance, there has been uneven uptake of high-quality programming, resulting in a patchwork of sometimes competing efforts across our country. In order to build cohesive and sustainable evidence-based programming, intentional, explicit and systematic effort must be afforded to matters of implementation and scale-up. In Canada, School Mental Health ASSIST has been developed to provide leadership, implementation support and embeddable resources to the province of Ontario's 72 school districts, and 5000 schools, with a view to ensuring long-term sustainability of best-in-class school mental health practices. Key elements for uptake and scale-up are described, with an implementation science lens and an emphasis on aspects that are generalizable across jurisdictions.Entities:
Keywords: implementation science; scale-up; school mental health; sustainability
Year: 2016 PMID: 27019639 PMCID: PMC4784518 DOI: 10.1080/14623730.2015.1088681
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Ment Health Promot ISSN: 1462-3730
Figure 1. Tiered intervention model within a system of care
Top 10 Organizational conditions for effective school mental health
| 1. Commitment | 6. Standard processes |
| 2. Mental health leadership team | 7. Systematic professional learning |
| 3. Clear and focused vision | 8. Mental health strategy/action plan |
| 4. Communication and shared language | 9. Collaboration |
| 5. Assessment of (initial) capacity and resources | 10. Ongoing quality improvement |
Continuum for school board capacity building in school mental health
| Mental health awareness | Mental health literacy | Mental health expertise |
|---|---|---|
| Professional learning strategies for providing basic mental health information, tailored for different school board audiences | Professional learning strategies for ensuring a deeper working knowledge of mental well-being, for those who work directly with students | Professional learning strategies for ensuring those who serve vulnerable students have the knowledge/skills to effectively provide evidence based SMH programming |
| ALL | SOME | FEW |
Figure 2. Continuous quality improvement cycle for province, board, and school level
Scaling for items on the board mental health and addictions scan
| Awareness/contemplation | (e.g. no work in this area, but the board may be considering action) |
| Exploration | (e.g. reviewing the literature, talking with colleagues, scanning the work of others) |
| Installation | (e.g. mobilizing people, getting approvals, vetting drafts) |
| Initial implementation | (e.g. piloting in a few places, trying out parts of the activity, circulating first versions) |
| Partial Implementation | (e.g. revising based on initial evaluation, expanding pilot, targeted communication) |
| Full Implementation | (e.g. scaling up to board level, final versions, broad communication) |
| Sustainability | (e.g. embedded in district culture, part of practice, extended to special population) |
Figure 3. Cohort 1 data on critical items measuring overall organizational conditions over time