| Literature DB >> 27927174 |
Helen Herrman1,2, Cathy Humphreys3, Stephen Halperin4, Katherine Monson4, Carol Harvey5,6, Cathrine Mihalopoulos7, Susan Cotton1,2, Penelope Mitchell8, Tony Glynn9, Anne Magnus7, Lenice Murray4, Josef Szwarc10, Elise Davis11, Sophie Havighurst12, Patrick McGorry1,2, Sam Tyano13, Ida Kaplan10, Simon Rice1,2, Kristen Moeller-Saxone14,15.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Out-of-home care (OoHC) refers to young people removed from their families by the state because of abuse, neglect or other adversities. Many of the young people experience poor mental health and social function before, during and after leaving care. Rigorously evaluated interventions are urgently required. This publication describes the protocol for the Ripple project and notes early findings from a controlled trial demonstrating the feasibility of the work. The Ripple project is implementing and evaluating a complex mental health intervention that aims to strengthen the therapeutic capacities of carers and case managers of young people (12-17 years) in OoHC.Entities:
Keywords: Complex intervention; Implementation; Looked after children; Out-of-home care; Prevention; Youth mental health
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27927174 PMCID: PMC5142401 DOI: 10.1186/s12888-016-1145-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 3.630
Overview of the Ripple mental health intervention: a complex mental health intervention in Melbourne’s North West Metropolitan Health Region (NWMR)
| Main components | Activities | Description |
|---|---|---|
| A. Organisational Collaboration and Contribution | Implementation Group established at each Community Service Organisation (CSO) | Lead Ripple practitioners, Ripple project staff, and CSO management and staff meet regularly to review activity and opportunities and adapt the intervention as required |
| Ripple Practitioner Training and Supervision | Skilled mental health and alcohol and other drug (AOD) practitioners selected from 3 partner mental health agencies, trained and supervised (by lead practitioners from the same agencies) to work part-time with the CSOs | |
| Youth Peer Leaders | Young people with lived experience co-deliver training and other selected activities | |
| B. Mode of Delivery Ripple practitioner with specialist mental health expertise visits regularly | Professional Practice Groups | Ripple practitioner and CSO staff meet regularly for reflective practice; skills training; and case discussion |
| Training Sessions | CSO staff nominate key areas or topics for training on key mental health or AOD topics | |
| Secondary Consultation and Care Team Consultation | Ripple practitioner available by special arrangement for staff or care-team consultation about a specific young person | |
| Carer Groups | CSO staff trained in TinT: option to train carers in TinT courses | |
| C. Content | Support for skills training and reflection for CSO staff with use of Toolbox and TinT experience | CSO staff trained in i) mental health & AOD signs, symptoms, and support strategies, ii)accessing and navigating mental health support |
| Tuning into Teens (TinT) | Selected CSO staff trained as TinT trainers for: carer groups; and CSO staff | TinT adapted for OoHC to support the development of emotional attunement and emotion-coaching roles for those caring for adolescents. TinT program staff provide training and supervision |
| Toolbox | Online information on evidence-based therapeutic practice elements | Toolbox adapted for use in OoHC. Ripple practitioners trained to support CSO staff in its use |
| D. Menu of Therapeutic and Mental Health Knowledge and Skillsb | Challenging behaviours (and the role of trauma in their development and maintenance); Emotion regulation; Depression and anxiety; Communication and social skills; Family-focused interventions; Motivational interviewing; Problem solving; Promoting resilience; Self-harm and suicide | |
aEach CSO has several worksites for home-based care teams and residential care houses
bTraining, reflection and supervision available to CSO staff in this range of skills, used according to the agenda chosen at each worksite
Fig. 1Health and Community Service System for youth in OoHC in Victoria1. Legend - OYH: Orygen Youth Health Clinical Program; RCH IMYOS: Royal Children’s Hospital Intensive Mental Health Youth Outreach Service; YSAS: Youth Support and Advocacy Service; CMY: Centre for Multicultural Youth; CY & FS: Child, Youth and Family Services; CSOs: Community Support Organisations; VACCA: Victorian Aboriginal Child Care Agency. 1Specialist mental health services for young people aged 12-17 years in Victoria are provided by community-based state-funded mental health services [18]. Their contact with young people in OoHC and with the CSOs is typically ad hoc rather than organised systematically. Foundation House (the Victorian Foundation for Survivors of Torture and Trauma), the Centre for Multicultural Youth (CMY) and Take Two (state-provided psychological services for children and young people in OoHC) provide services relevant to some or all of these young people. They are consulting study partners. These organisations all interact with primary health care, hospital emergency and inpatient services, police, justice, education and vocational services. The Ripple intervention region is Melbourne’s North and West Metropolitan Health Region (NWMR). NMWR has a culturally diverse population of 1.7 million people, including 24% of Victoria’s Aboriginal people (0.58% of the region’s population). It comprises Melbourne’s central business district and inner, middle and outer urban areas. OYH, RCH IMYOS, and YSAS provide specialist mental health services for young people in this region. Four major CSOs in this region are study partners: Anglicare, MacKillop Family Services, Westcare and VACCA
Ripple study measures and procedures
| Outcomes for young people | Measures |
|---|---|
| Enhanced social and emotional wellbeing | Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ)[ |
| Enhanced quality of life | Child Health Utility Index (CHU9D)[ |
| Better engagement with school | Selected questions from Pathways Longitudinal Study [ |
| Placement stability and experiences of contact with family of origin | Selected questions from Beyond 18 Study [ |
| Fewer mental health problems | K10 [ |
| Less harmful use of substances | ASSIST-Y [ |
| Improved social function | Friendship Scale [ |
| Less involvement in crime | Questions developed by study team for economic evaluation - Resource Use Questionnaire |
| Outcomes for carers and case managers | |
| Enhanced health-related quality of life | AQoL8D [ |
| Increased satisfaction, sense of competence and efficacy with carer role; better access to self-care and support | Carer Users Expectations Survey (CUES) [ |
| Better relationships with young people | Family Assessment Device – General Functioning Scale (FAD-GFS) [ |
| Improved skills for managing behaviours and emotions of concern | Emotions as a Child questionnaire (EAC) [ |
| Outcomes for services | |
| Measure of organisational learning capacity and readiness for transformational change in human services | Organisational Learning Capacity Scale (OLCS) [ |
| Costs and cost offsets of the Ripple intervention | |
| The costs of the Ripple intervention | Multiple data sources, including: |
| Cost offsets of the Ripple intervention - | The Resource Use Questionnaire developed for the project collects broad resource use of participating young people and carers over the previous year for both assessment waves: including use of health and welfare services, educational attendance and workforce productivity and contacts with civic compliance authorities. Carers provide relevant information about themselves and the consenting youth in their care. |
| The costs of consulting health professionals | Valued using published prices available in Medicare and Pharmaceutical Benefits Schedules. |
| Costs to the education and justice sectors | Derived (top down) from publicly available cost data. |
| Interview and data management procedures for both waves: A CSO case manager contacts each young person and carer to ask permission for contact from a trained Ripple research assistant. At a face-to-face meeting in their preferred location, the respondents are asked for informed consent and assured of privacy and lack of coercion before proceeding with the interview. Procedures for data management ensure anonymous data storage as well as appropriate linkage between each young person, carer and case manager. The measures are incorporated in an interview schedule that is administered face-to-face by trained research assistants. Respondents are invited to complete self-report measures on iPads provided. Research assistants provide help if requested by the participant, or otherwise assist with completion on paper. Data entry is automated for measures included on the iPads and otherwise completed and checked by the research assistants. Youth and carer participants are offered reimbursement of $30 for participation | |
Fig. 2Design of the Ripple controlled trial of implementing a complex mental health intervention in out-of-home care (OoHC) settings in Melbourne
Fig. 3Ripple Project Interviews – Young People; Wave 1. *Note: Young people who were counted in the census but turned 18 during the interview period were deemed ineligible as they were out of age range and had left care. This had the additional effect of preventing follow up as agencies lose contact with young people at this age