| Literature DB >> 33156933 |
Olakunle Alonge1, Anna Chiumento2, Hesham M Hamoda3, Eman Gaber4, Zill-E- Huma5, Maryam Abbasinejad6, Walaa Hosny4, Alia Shakiba7, Ayesha Minhas8, Khalid Saeed9, Lawrence Wissow10, Atif Rahman2.
Abstract
Globally there is a substantial burden of mental health problems among children and adolescents. Task-shifting/task-sharing mental health services to non-specialists, e.g. teachers in school settings, provide a unique opportunity for the implementation of mental health interventions at scale in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). There is scant information to guide the large-scale implementation of school-based mental health programme in LMICs. This article describes pathways for large-scale implementation of a School Mental Health Program (SMHP) in the Eastern Mediterranean Region (EMR). A collaborative learning group (CLG) comprising stakeholders involved in implementing the SMHP including policymakers, programme managers and researchers from EMR countries was established. Participants in the CLG applied the theory of change (ToC) methodology to identify sets of preconditions, assumptions and hypothesized pathways for improving the mental health outcomes of school-aged children in public schools through implementation of the SMHP. The proposed pathways were then validated through multiple regional and national ToC workshops held between January 2017 and September 2019, as the SMHP was being rolled out in three EMR countries: Egypt, Pakistan and Iran. Preconditions, strategies and programmatic/contextual adaptations that apply across these three countries were drawn from qualitative narrative summaries of programme implementation processes and facilitated discussions during biannual CLG meetings. The ToC for large-scale implementation of the SMHP in the EMR suggests that identifying national champions, formulating dedicated cross-sectoral (including the health and education sector) implementation teams, sustained policy advocacy and stakeholders engagement across multiple levels, and effective co-ordination among education and health systems especially at the local level are among the critical factors for large-scale programme implementation. The pathways described in this paper are useful for facilitating effective implementation of the SMHP at scale and provide a theory-based framework for evaluating the SMHP and similar programmes in the EMR and other LMICs.Entities:
Keywords: Eastern Mediterranean Region; School mental health; implementation; theory of change
Year: 2020 PMID: 33156933 PMCID: PMC7646738 DOI: 10.1093/heapol/czaa124
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Policy Plan ISSN: 0268-1080 Impact factor: 3.344
Summary of SMPH ToC development process in the EMR
| Regional TOC development at CLG workshops | National TOC validation exercises | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Egypt | Pakistan | Iran | ||
| No of Workshops/Meetings | 2 workshops |
2 workshops 4 lectures 10 meetings | 2 workshops |
1 workshop 17 meetings |
| Time period | May 2017 to September 2019 | March 2017 to June 2019 | November 2016 to April 2017 | September 2018 to April 2019 |
| Composition of participant involved |
MOH: 3 MOE: 1 WHO: 2 Academics: 3 Others |
MOH: 29 MOE: 5 Lecture attendees: ∼50 Others |
MOH: 7 MOE: 22 Others**: 15 |
MOH: 7 MOE: 24 Academics: 6 Others**: 3 |
| Convener of the TOC exercise | SHINE network CLG facilitators | General Secretariat of Mental Health and Substance Abuse, National Ministry of Health, Egypt | The Institute of Psychiatry, National Ministry of Health, Pakistan in collaboration with Human Development Research Foundation (an NGO) | The National School Mental Health Team, Ministry of Health, Iran |
| Key method | Stakeholder meeting | Individual and group stakeholder meetings | Stakeholder meetings | Focus groups |
| Key procedure at the TOC | Free listing, ranking, voting, review and feedback | Free listing, ranking, voting, review and feedback | Free listing, ranking, review and feedback | Free listing |
Others include NGO representatives, psychologists, and representatives from other ministries and government agencies.
Figure 1Regional ToC for the implementation of the SMHP in the EMR.
Figure 2Model of SMHP cascade training and referral pathways in Egypt, Pakistan and Iran.
Country-specific strategies and adaptations for the implementation of SMHP in EMR
| ToC factors | Egypt | Pakistan | Iran |
|---|---|---|---|
| Key strategies |
1. Formulation of implementation team within an existing agency (General Secretariat of Mental Health and Addiction Treatment) of the ministry of health (MoH) with historical collaboration with the Department of Environmental, Population and Health Education of the ministry of education (MoE).
2. Inclusion of NGOs (e.g. Save the Children) who are already working in promoting child health at scale with external funds in the implementation team.
|
1. Selection of a government tertiary health institution to lead large-scale implementation.
2. Signing of an official memorandum of understanding (MOU) between the MOE and MOH.
|
1. High-level negotiations between the MoH and MoE which preserved the role of the MoE as the principal agent responsible for programme activities at the school level, and MoH providing supervisory support to the schools, and oversight at other levels, including the referral pathways for specialized services.
|
| Contextual adaptation |
1. Elevating the role of school psychologists (instead of teachers) to deliver targeted interventions. They also provide training to teachers, serve as supervisors, and as first point of referral for specialized care.
2. Establishment of a primary mental health centre where the school psychologists engage directly with parents and community members (and also provide targeted mental health interventions with support of psychiatrists from other levels of care).
3. Engaging with the nascent national health insurance scheme to incorporate the scale-up (and funding) for SMHP as a preventative health strategy for mental health at the primary health-care level.
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1. Synchronizing the timing of teachers’ training on SMHP with the school academic calendar.
2. Clarifying roles among various individuals involved within the school system e.g. emphasizing the role of teachers to promote mental health (and not to provide targeted interventions) and to identify children requiring mental health care for prompt referral first to champion teachers who are expected to work with parents to guide the child’s access to the health system.
|
1.Inclusion of MOE’s counselling centres (which function as referral centres for school-aged children experiencing mental health problems within the MoE structure, providing counselling and psychological interventions). These counselling centres are then linked to Community Mental Health Centers (CMHC) which are community-based psychiatric health care facilities within the MoH structure for cases requiring specialized services.
2. Exclusion of primary care physicians (PCPs) from the referral pathway of cases requiring specialized care. These children are referred directly by teachers from schools to the counselling centres and then to the CHMC, as the first point of contact in the health services delivery system.
|
| Intervention adaptation |
1. Addition of a targeted intervention module on learning difficulties, self-harm and bullying which are prevalent mental health conditions in Egypt.
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1. Translation of the SMHP manual to Urdu, addition of a module on teacher self-care, use of culturally and age- appropriate case examples to illustrate key steps in interventions
2. Reframing the mental health conditions described in the SMHP programme as internalizing and externalizing problems.
3. Adding a section on how to conduct parent–teacher interaction for teachers and others delivering the SMHP.
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1. Prioritizing teachers’ activities to focus on screening and identification of children with mental health needs (and not delivery of any targeted intervention).
2. Prioritizing counsellors’ activities at MOE’s counselling centres to provide targeted interventions within the SMHP.
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Key strategies are approaches that determined the successful rollout of the entire programme, including those that were crucial for facilitating the described preconditions in each country.
Contextual adaptations are changes to the internal environment (e.g. culture, norms and arrangements) within the implementing agencies, including key implementers or changes to the external environment (e.g. political, economic systems).
Intervention adaptations are changes to the intervention (primarily the SMHP manual) to facilitate its delivery in a specific context.