| Literature DB >> 33897906 |
Elizabeth A Baker1, Stephanie K Brewer2, Julie Sarno Owens3, Clayton R Cook4, Aaron R Lyon2.
Abstract
There has been an increase in school mental health research aimed at producing generalizable knowledge to address longstanding science-to-practice gaps to increase children's access to evidence-based mental health services. Successful dissemination and implementation are both important pieces to address science-to-practice gaps, but there is conceptual and semantic imprecision that creates confusion regarding where dissemination ends and implementation begins, as well as an imbalanced focus in research on implementation relative to dissemination. In this paper, we provide an enhanced operational definition of dissemination; offer a conceptual model that outlines elements of effective dissemination that can produce changes in awareness, knowledge, perceptions, and motivation across different stakeholder groups; and delineate guiding principles that can inform dissemination science and practice. The overarching goal of this paper is to stimulate future research that aims to advance dissemination science and practice in school mental health.Entities:
Keywords: Dissemination; Dissemination science; Implementation; School mental health; Science-to-practice gaps
Year: 2021 PMID: 33897906 PMCID: PMC8053372 DOI: 10.1007/s12310-021-09446-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: School Ment Health ISSN: 1866-2625
Fig. 1Conceptual model of dissemination and its impact on role-specific implementation activities and youth mental health outcomes
Target stakeholders in context and specific behaviors to target for change
| Stakeholder | Context | Change Agent Role | Implementation-Specific Behaviors |
|---|---|---|---|
| Local, state, national government | Creating governance and enabling resource allocation | Voting; writing bills; serving on a specific subcommittee; holding town hall meetings | |
| Local, state, or national communities operating in a specific service sector | Allocating resources; lobbying policy makers; functioning as an intermediary | Providing grant funding to support implementation projects; Providing technical assistance or professional development; hosting conferences, writing position papers; educating the public about solutions | |
| Specific communities | Creating priorities, contexts, climates, expectations, and accountability systems; enabling resource allocation | Providing strategic communications about evidence-based practices; applying recognition and reward systems; making hiring decisions; providing feedback about implementation; deciding about program adoptions; overseeing the use of data to guide decision making | |
| School buildings applying evidence-based practices with students | Increasing access to high-quality services directly and indirectly; implementation citizenship behaviors; champions | Implementing evidence-based practices with students; championing and advocating for services; providing consultation and peer support; staying abreast of the science | |
| Specific community settings and experiencing firsthand mental health needs | Creating pull; advocating for student needs to policymakers, leaders, and the public | Attending meetings; requesting specific services; offering peer support; voting for initiatives; partnering with others to affect change |
Guiding principles for tailoring dissemination strategies to specific audiences, determinants, and mechanisms
| Who | How | What | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Who are the people receiving the information? | How (what mode/medium) is the content being delivered? | What content is being delivered? | |
| Guiding principles | Tailor messages according to the target stakeholder. Consider the target stakeholder’s… | Consider utilizing multiple mediums to deliver content, including, but not limited to… | Common forms for delivering content include, but are not limited to… |
| - Background | - Webinars | - Narratives | |
| - Goals | - Social media platforms | - Data | |
| - Sociodemographic factors | - Radio | - Visualizations | |
| - Cultural beliefs | - Television | Decisions regarding form should be informed by the “who” | |
| - Values | - Websites | Personalize risk data using stories, narratives, and anecdotes to the audience | |
| - Psychosocial determinants | - Town hall meetings | Frame messages to describe disadvantages associated with NOT adopting EBP (as well as advantages FOR adopting EBP) | |
| - Geographic location | - Individual meetings | ||
| - Language | - Research briefs | ||
| - Customs | |||
| Use clear, plain language (avoid jargon) | |||
| Key Determinants (barriers and facilitators) + Mechanisms (processes to achieve change) = Multi-faceted Dissemination Approach | |||
| After understanding the audience, how to access them, the preferred method of content delivery, and the content most relevant to them, you can develop a dissemination approach that overcomes barriers, leverages facilitators, and applies processes (emotional, cognitive, social) that maximize the likelihood of change in awareness, knowledge, perception and/or motivation | |||
| Key determinants | Access to stakeholder group, availability of stakeholder group, organizational leadership, openness to innovation, time, personnel, and budgetary resources | Preferred or routine method of intaking information, consider organizational leadership | Effective delivery of information in ways that motivate and increase behavioral intentions, consider the degree of readiness or openness to innovation |
| Mechanisms to target | Interest/engagement of stakeholder group, perceived relevance/importance by stakeholder group | Provide information (cognitive) | Knowledge, social norms, expectations, motivation |
| Increase attention (cognitive) | |||
| Stimulate emotion (emotion) | |||
| Facilitate social comparison (social) | |||
Fig. 2Causal pathway model linking dissemination strategies to mechanisms of change and determinants of outcomes