| Literature DB >> 36003211 |
Derrecka M Boykin1, Laura O Wray2, Jennifer S Funderburk3, Steve Holliday4, Mark E Kunik5, Michael R Kauth1, Terri L Fletcher1, Joseph Mignogna6, Richard B Roberson7, Jeffrey A Cully1.
Abstract
Evidence-based psychotherapies (EBPs) are underused in health care settings. Aligning implementation of EBPs with the needs of health care leaders (i.e., operational stakeholders) can potentially accelerate their uptake into routine practice. Operational stakeholders (such as hospital leaders, clinical directors, and national program officers) can influence development and oversight of clinical programs as well as policy directives at local, regional, and national levels. Thus, engaging these stakeholders during the implementation and dissemination of EBPs is critical when targeting wider use in health care settings. This article describes how research-operations partnerships were leveraged to increase implementation of an empirically supported psychotherapy - brief Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (brief CBT) - in Veterans Health Administration (VA) primary care settings. The partnered implementation and dissemination efforts were informed by the empirically derived World Health Organization's ExpandNet framework. A steering committee was formed and included several VA operational stakeholders who helped align the brief CBT program with the implementation needs of VA primary care settings. During the first 18 months of the project, partnerships facilitated rapid implementation of brief CBT at eight VA facilities, including training of 12 providers who saw 120 patients, in addition to expanded program elements to better support sustainability (e.g., train-the-trainer procedures).Entities:
Keywords: Evidence-based psychotherapy; ExpandNet; cognitive-behavioral therapy; implementation; research–operations partnerships
Year: 2022 PMID: 36003211 PMCID: PMC9393574 DOI: 10.1017/cts.2022.430
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Transl Sci ISSN: 2059-8661
Fig. 1.Timeline for partnered implementation of brief CBT in integrated primary care settings in VISN 17 (year 1). Note: Brief CBT, Brief Cognitive Behavioral Therapy; EHR, electronic health record.
Implementation and scaling-up plan for brief cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) in integrated primary care mental health (PCMHI) settings based on ExpandNet
| Operational needs/priorities | Implementation and scaling-up strategies |
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| • Increase use of EBP in PCMHI settings | • Use empirically supported brief CBT intervention and training materials to replicate its implementation in new PCMHI settings. |
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| • Promote brief CBT to PCMHI leaders as well as providers at the regional and facility levels to gain “buy-in” for the program. | • Create promotional materials to encourage clinics and providers to participate in the brief CBT program. |
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| • Request a rapid, flexible implementation of brief CBT across eight US VA facilities in a southern region (VISN 17) | • Use existing web-based brief CBT provider training program designed to be flexible (tailored training curriculum) and accessible (online). |
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| • Leverage external funding to support brief CBT resource team (e.g., HSR&D, MIRECC, OAA). | • Train providers in small cohorts to maximize brief CBT resource team capacity. |
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| • Evaluate implementation and clinical outcomes consistent with organizational standards for depression care quality (e.g., adoption rates, number of sessions, patient depression outcomes). | • Embed electronic brief CBT progress note in computerized patient record system to monitor depression care quality and patient outcomes. |
EBP, evidence-based psychotherapy; PCMHI, Integrated Primary Care Mental Health; Brief CBT, Brief Cognitive Behavioral Therapy; VISN, VA Integrated Service Network (region); HSR&D, Health Services Research and Development Office; MIRECC, Mental Illness Research, Education, and Clinical Center; OAA, VA Office of Academic Affiliations; VA, Veterans Health Administration.
Preliminary brief CBT for depression patient outcomes relative to prior clinical trial data [16]
| PHQ-9 mean | |
|---|---|
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| Patients with depression (PHQ-9 score of 10 or greater) | −3.50 ± 4.86 |
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| All patients with depression (PHQ-9 score of 10 or greater) | −4.39 ± 4.95 |
| Patients with depression and three+ brief CBT sessions | −5.22 ± 5.08 |
| Patients with depression and five+ brief CBT sessions | −5.62 ± 5.43 |
Brief CBT, brief Cognitive Behavioral Therapy; PHQ-9, Nine-item Patient Health Questionnaire; HSR&D, Health Services Research and Development.
A five-point change in PHQ-9 scores indicates a clinically significant reduction.