| Literature DB >> 28316559 |
Laura K Murray1, Wietse Tol2, Mark Jordans3, Goran Sabir Zangana4, Ahmed Mohammed Amin5, Paul Bolton6, Judith Bass7, Fransisco Javier Bonilla-Escobar8, Graham Thornicroft9.
Abstract
The burden of mental health problems in (post)conflict low- and middle-income countries (LMIC) is substantial. Despite growing evidence for the effectiveness of selected mental health programs in conflict-affected LMIC and growing policy support, actual uptake and implementation have been slow. A key direction for future research, and a new frontier within science and practice, is Dissemination and Implementation (DI) which directly addresses the movement of evidence-based, effective health care approaches from experimental settings into routine use. This paper outlines some key implementation challenges, and strategies to address these, while implementing evidence-based treatments in conflict-affected LMIC based on the authors' collective experiences. Dissemination and implementation evaluation and research in conflict settings is an essential new research direction. Future DI work in LMIC should include: 1) defining concepts and developing measurement tools, 2) the measurement of DI outcomes for all programming, and 3) the systematic evaluation of specific implementation strategies.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 28316559 PMCID: PMC5356225 DOI: 10.1097/WTF.0000000000000070
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Intervention (Amstelveen) ISSN: 1571-8883