| Literature DB >> 31811012 |
Katie Richards1, Amelia Austin2, Karina Allen2,3,4, Ulrike Schmidt2,3.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Worldwide mental health disorders are associated with a considerable amount of human suffering, disability and mortality. Yet, the provision of rapid evidence-based care to mitigate the human and economic costs of these disorders is limited. The greatest progress in developing and delivering early intervention services has occurred within psychosis. There is now growing support for and calls to extend such approaches to other diagnostic groups. The aim of this scoping review is to systematically map the emerging literature on early intervention services for non-psychotic mental health disorders, with a focus on outlining how services are structured, implemented and scaled. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: The protocol was developed using the guidance for scoping reviews in the Joanna Briggs Institute manual and the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses extension for scoping reviews checklist. A systematic search for published and unpublished literature will be conducted using the following databases: (1) MEDLINE, (2) PsycINFO, (3) HMIC, (4) EMBASE and (5) ProQuest. To be included, documents must describe and/or evaluate an early intervention service for adolescents or adults with a non-psychotic mental health disorder. There will be no restrictions on publication type, study design and date. Title and abstract, and full-text screening will be completed by one reviewer, with a proportion of articles screened in duplicate. Data analysis will primarily involve a qualitatively summary of the early intervention literature, the characteristics of early intervention services and key findings relating to their evaluation and implementation. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: The synthesis of published and unpublished articles will not require ethical approval. The results of this scoping review will be published in a peer-reviewed journal and disseminated via social media, conference presentations and other knowledge translation activities. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2019. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: early intervention; health service design; implementation; mental health
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31811012 PMCID: PMC6924732 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2019-033656
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
MEDLINE search strategy
| Query | Results | |
| #1 | exp Early Medical Intervention [MeSH term)/ or (early intervention* or early-intervention*).tw | 19 623 |
| #2 | exp Mood Disorders [MeSH term)/ or Bipolar Disorders [MeSH term)/ or (mood disorder* or affective disorder* or depressi* or dysthymi* or bipolar*).tw | 453 041 |
| #3 | #1 AND #2 | 1616 |
| #4 | exp Anxiety Disorders [MeSH term)/ or (anxiety disorder* or neurotic disorder* or agoraphobi* or obsessive-compulsive disorder* or OCD or panic disorder* or phobic disorder* or post-traumatic stress disorder* or post traumatic stress disorder* or PTSD or generalised anxiety disorder* or social phobia).tw | 119 604 |
| #5 | #1 AND #4 | 560 |
| #6 | exp “Feeding and Eating Disorders” [MeSH term)/ or (eating disorder* or anorexi* or bulimi* or binge-eating* or binge eating* or (eating disorder not otherwise specified) or EDNOS or (other specified feeding or eating disorder) or OSFED).tw | 56 480 |
| #7 | #1 AND #6 | 199 |
| #8 | exp Substance-Related Disorders [MeSH term)/ or exp “Disruptive, Impulse Control, and Conduct Disorders” [MeSH term)/ or (((substance-related or alcohol or opioid or morphine or marijuana or heroin or cocaine or amphetamine or cannabis) adj1 (disorder* or illness* or dependence or abuse or misuse)) or (impulse control disorder*) or conduct disorder* or fire setting behaviour* or gambling or trichotillomania).tw | 295 108 |
| #9 | #1 AND #8 | 924 |
| #10 | exp Somatoform Disorders [MeSH term)/ or (somatoform or somatoform disorder* or somati#ation or body dysmorphi* or conversion disorder* or hypochondri*).tw | 25 487 |
| #11 | #1 AND #10 | 38 |
| #12 | exp Personality Disorders [MeSH terms)/ or (personality disorder* or antisocial personality disorder* or anti-social personality disorder* or borderline personality disorder* or emotionally unstable personality disorder* or obsessive-compulsive personality disorder* or dependent personality disorder* or histrionic personality disorder* or narcissistic personality disorder* or avoidant personality disorder* or paranoid personality disorder* or schizoid personality disorder* OR schizotypal personality disorder*).tw | 47 019 |
| #13 | #1 AND #12 | 208 |
Draft data charting form
| Data item | Description of item |
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| Type of document | The type of document can include but will not be limited to published or unpublish primary research, any type of review, protocols, theoretical paper, guidelines, opinion pieces, editorials and expert consensus papers. |
| Author(s) | List of authors |
| Year of publication | Year of publication |
| Title | Title of document |
| Journal | The title of the scientific journal (for published documents only) |
| Country of origin | Country where the document originates |
| Aim/purpose of document | Summary of the aim/purpose of the document |
| Study design | For published or unpublished research papers, the design of the study as reported in the paper. Includes but is not limited to randomised controlled trials, pre–post design, historical controlled trial, prospective or retrospective cohort studies, cross-sectional and case series/study. |
| Study methodology | The methodological framework: qualitative, quantitative or mixed methods. |
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| Name of service | The name of the early intervention service/programme. |
| Year established | The year the early intervention service was established. |
| Location | The country and region in which the early intervention service was implemented. |
| Population | The population for which the service was designed for. This item will include details such as age, diagnosis, duration of illness and illness severity. |
| Setting | The physical setting in which the early intervention service is based. This includes but is not limited to community centres, primary care, outpatient clinics and inpatient wards. Early intervention services can occupy more than one of these settings. |
| Service providers | A description of who provides the service and their role, includes but is not limited to social workers, youth workers, peer support workers, nurses, clinical or counselling psychologists and psychiatrists. |
| Service structure/process | A description of the service structure and administrative processes includes but is not limited to ‘service within a service’ models, stand-alone multidisciplinary team models, ‘hub’ and ‘spoke’ models, and process variables such as specific wait time targets. |
| Access to service | Methods for accessing the early intervention service, includes but is not limited to active engagement and outreach through schools, colleges and youth clubs, referral from primary care, self-referral and drop-in. |
| Services and interventions | A description of the types of services and interventions provided, includes but is not limited to psychoeducation, online self-help and self-management support, psychological therapies (eg, CBT, brief therapy), sexual health and family planning, health promotion, social services, peer support, and crisis intervention and management. |
| Clinical staging | Whether a clinical staging approach was used to inform the design, evaluation or implementation of the service. |
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| Participants | Details related to the participants included in the study. This will include information related to sample size, diagnosis, age, sex and inclusion/exclusion criteria. |
| Comparator data or standard care | Description of comparator data or the care provided to a control group. |
| Outcomes and time points | Description of the qualitative and quantitative outcomes and the time points of data collection. This will include standardised clinical assessments, and self-report measures as well as implementation outcomes, such as measures of acceptability, feasibility, adoption, fidelity and sustainment. |
| Key results/findings | An outline of the key results and findings reported in the document. This includes quantitative outcomes such as changes in symptoms, engagement and patient satisfaction, as well as qualitative outcomes, such as, descriptions of barriers and facilitators to implementation. |
CBT, cognitive–behavioural therapy.
Summary of reach, effectiveness, adoption, implementation and maintenance framework criteria
| Reach (participant representativeness) | The representativeness of individuals enrolled in the study to the characteristics of the intended population. |
| Effectiveness (outcome representativeness) | Measured outcomes are important and meaningful to all stakeholders involved, including potential negative effects, quality of life and economic outcomes. |
| Adoption (setting representativeness) | The representativeness of settings and the individuals within those settings who deliver the programme. |
| Implementation (fidelity/adaptation, and cost/feasibility) | Fidelity to the intervention and adaptations made to intervention during study/programme. |
| The cost of the intervention in terms of time and money. | |
| Maintenance (sustainment) | The extent to which an intervention becomes institutionalised or part of the routine organisational practices and policies and the extent to which behaviour is sustained for more than 6 months. |