| Literature DB >> 34806990 |
Wanda Tempelaar1,2, Melanie Barwick2,3,4, Allison Crawford2,5, Aristotle Voineskos1,2,6, Donald Addington7, Jean Addington7, Tallan Alexander8, Crystal Baluyut1,2, Sarah Bromley1, Janet Durbin2,3,9, George Foussias1,2, Catherine Ford10, Lauren de Freitas1, Seharish Jindani1, Anne Kirvan5, Paul Kurdyak2,3,11, Kirstin Pauly8, Alexia Polillo1, Rachel Roby1, Sanjeev Sockalingam2,12, Alexandra Sosnowski1,3, Victoria Villanueva8, Wei Wang8,13, Nicole Kozloff1,2,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Timely and comprehensive treatment in the form of early psychosis intervention (EPI) has become the standard of care for youth with psychosis. While EPI services were designed to be delivered in person, the COVID-19 pandemic required many EPI programs to rapidly transition to virtual delivery, with little evidence to guide intervention adaptations or to support the effectiveness and satisfaction with virtual EPI services.Entities:
Keywords: early psychosis intervention; mixed methods implementation; virtual care delivery
Year: 2021 PMID: 34806990 PMCID: PMC8653974 DOI: 10.2196/34591
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Res Protoc ISSN: 1929-0748
Figure 1NAVIGATE core components. CAMH: Centre for Addiction and Mental Health.
Adaptations to support virtual delivery of NAVIGATE.
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| Technology to support virtual care | Policies and procedures of virtual care | Clinical Practice |
| Early hospital-wide |
Devices (hospital laptops and cellphones) made available to many clinicians Limited number of cellphones and SIM cards donated to the hospital and made available for clients who lacked access to a working cellphone. Registration and limited training for clinicians on a hospital-approved videoconference platform that integrates with email/calendar, permits screen-sharing Registration and limited training for clinicians on specialized software to support timely access to office telephone calls while working from home Registration and limited training for clinicians on additional software applications to support virtual care; for example, faxing, scanning, and secure document transfer |
Privacy, safety, and confidentiality standards disseminated with expectations for documenting consent to virtual care Suggestions for virtual crisis management sent, including procedures for involuntary detainment and completion of other legal forms Remuneration for psychiatrists to provide care over the phone or videoconference (province-wide) |
Videos created and posted on the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health Virtual Mental Health website to train on best practices in virtual care Introduction of fillable PDF forms to document client consent (eg, to participate in virtual care) |
| Early NAVIGATE-specific |
NAVIGATE handouts available in fillable PDFs and Word (Microsoft Inc) |
Criteria for considering in-person appointments disseminated |
Higher level of structure/organization for group sessions Clinician cellphones enable SMS text messaging with clients Additional briefer appointments are encouraged to maintain attention and engagement Connect with other clinicians during team meetings on clinical practice in virtual delivery of NAVIGATE including tips to reduce barriers or boundary-setting Increased collaborative client meetings involving multiple NAVIGATE roles together (ie, individual resiliency training, supported education and employment, and family clinician) |
Virtual NAVIGATE: adaptation and implementation evaluation plan.
| Objective | Project aim | Tools/Framework | Data sources | Timing | |
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| Adaptations | To explore the adaptations required for delivery of the NAVIGATE model and its implementation, including understanding how aspects of the EPI model and NAVIGATE specifically are best suited to virtual delivery |
NAVIGATE Practice Profile: map adaptations to the delivery of NAVIGATE care among the different roles Framework for Reporting Adaptations and Modifications for Evidence-Based Interventions (FRAME): when/how modification was made, whether planned or unplanned, who determined, what is modified, level of delivery, nature of context/content modifications, fidelity-consistency, reasons including intent and contextual factors | Study team, clinicians, and administrators |
Months 1-4 Revise implementation as needed following interim analysis month 12 |
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| Outcomes | Proctor’s taxonomy of implementation outcomes | |||
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| Fidelity to the early psychosis intervention (EPI) model | To evaluate fidelity to the EPI model | First Episode Psychosis Services Fidelity Scale (FEPS-FS). A retrospective fidelity review will be conducted to assess practice prior to the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic (March 2020) and following the transition to virtual care, after initial adaptations have been made | Electronic health record and clinicians |
Pre–COVID-19 fidelity review based on the assessment of medical records in months 8-9 Virtual NAVIGATE review month 10 Integration with other analyses months 13-21 |
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| Fidelity to the NAVIGATE program | To evaluate fidelity to the core components of NAVIGATE | Measure clinician adherence to their NAVIGATE role through review of medical records and calculate the proportion of clients who receive IRT, SEE, family support or individualized medication management at least monthly or greater | Electronic health record and clinicians |
Virtual NAVIGATE review month 10 Integration with other analyses months 13-21 |
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| Facilitators and barriers | To explore implementation facilitators and barriers | Interviews based on the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR) | Clinicians |
Interviews and iterative analysis months 9-11 Integration with other analyses months 13-21 |
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| Satisfaction and experience | To evaluate satisfaction and experience with virtual NAVIGATE among clients, family members, and clinicians |
Virtual Client Experience Survey (VCES) Virtual Provider Experience Survey (VPES) Qualitative interviews |
Clients Clinicians Clients, family members, and clinicians |
VCES/VPES month 5-9 Interim analyses months 8-9 Integration with other analyses months 13-21 |
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| Service engagement | To investigate service engagement in virtual NAVIGATE | Time to, rate, and correlates of premature dropout, proportions, and correlates of how services are used (virtually by videoconference or phone or in person) | Electronic health record |
Data extraction starts month 8 Preliminary analysis months 12-13 Integration with other analyses months 13-21 |
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| Health equity | To explore health equity factors that may impact service engagement in virtual NAVIGATE |
Qualitative interviews Health Equity Impact Assessment |
Clients and family members Clinicians, administrators, youth, and family members with lived experience |
Interviews and iterative analysis months 9-11 Integration with other analyses months 13-21 |