| Literature DB >> 33728378 |
Ricardo Eiraldi1,2,3, Muniya Khanna1, Abbas F Jawad1,2, Thomas J Power1,2,3, Jaclyn Cacia1, Beatriz Cabello1, Billie S Schwartz1, Lauren Swift1, Rebecca Kanine1, Andrew Orapallo1, Barry McCurdy4, Jennifer A Mautone1,3.
Abstract
School-based mental health programs are increasingly recognized as methods by which to improve children's access to evidence-based practices (EBPs), particularly in urban under resourced communities. School-wide positive behavior interventions and supports (PBIS) is one approach to integrating mental health services into school-based programming; however, school providers require training and support to implement programs as intended. We have conducted a randomized controlled trial to compare two models for training school-based personnel to deliver group EBPs to children at high risk of developing internalizing or externalizing problems. School personnel (N = 24) from 6 schools in a large urban school district were trained with either a basic training and consultation strategy, or an enhanced training and consultation strategy. Preliminary findings show that the enhanced strategy resulted in 9% higher content fidelity than the basic strategy. School personnel who were switched to the basic strategy had slightly lower content fidelity for the last two years of the trial and school personnel who continued to receive basic consultation during the step-down phase saw their fidelity decline. The two conditions did not differ with regard to process fidelity.Entities:
Keywords: Fidelity; Implementation; Mental health evidence-based practices; Urban schools
Year: 2020 PMID: 33728378 PMCID: PMC7959161 DOI: 10.1080/23794925.2020.1784056
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evid Based Pract Child Adolesc Ment Health