2021
DOI: 10.1186/s12875-021-01550-5
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A pilot study of participatory and rapid implementation approaches to increase depression screening in primary care

Abstract: Background Most individuals with depression go unidentified and untreated. In 2016 the US Preventive Services Task Force released guidelines recommending universal screening in primary care to identify patients with depression and to link them to treatment. Feasible, acceptable, and effective strategies to implement these guidelines are needed. Methods This three-phased study employed rapid participatory methods to design and test strategies to inc… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…Ongoing training, coaching, and monitoring of office staff by practice and clinical leaders as well as EHR data captures and transparency in reporting ongoing screening rates are critical to the success of PPM screening. Moreover, the introduction of patient technologies, such as tablets, piloted in our health system offers an additional way to improve patient-reported screening measures (Last et al, 2021). Ambulatory care leaders must also solicit regular feedback about barriers to screening practices and involve providers and staff in developing solutions to overcome them.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Ongoing training, coaching, and monitoring of office staff by practice and clinical leaders as well as EHR data captures and transparency in reporting ongoing screening rates are critical to the success of PPM screening. Moreover, the introduction of patient technologies, such as tablets, piloted in our health system offers an additional way to improve patient-reported screening measures (Last et al, 2021). Ambulatory care leaders must also solicit regular feedback about barriers to screening practices and involve providers and staff in developing solutions to overcome them.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In response to these calls to action, an abundance of ideas for promoting youth mental health have been proposed. Youth mental health advocates have emphasized the urgent need to screen for youth mental health problems to identify and address symptoms and other sequelae before they begin to interfere with functioning (Guo & Jhe, 2021;Last et al, 2021); to widely disseminate information about mental illness and available welfare and mental health resources to improve recognition and prevention of mental health problems (Kelly et al, 2007;Lasecke et al, 2022); to increase the availability and accessibility of mental health resources, particularly for under-resourced and marginalized communities (Atkins et al, 2017;Torres Sanchez et al, 2022); to recruit, train, and employ more mental health professionals (Barnett et al, 2018;Konrad et al, 2009); and to increase funding to turn these ideas for promoting youth mental health into a reality (Cooper & Aratani, 2009). A glaring issue, however, is that it is not possible to immediately and simultaneously invest, implement, and sustain all of these avenues for promoting youth mental health within the current mental healthcare infrastructure.…”
Section: Promoting Youth Mental Health Through Stakeholder-generated ...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This process has long been used by companies to select which products to develop, by movie studios to select which pitches to fund, and by competition shows, such as American Idol, to select the winning contestant. More recently, implementation scientists have used innovation tournaments to crowdsource ideas from clinicians for solving intractable problems in mental healthcare (Last et al, 2021;Sibley et al, 2022). For example, Stewart and colleagues (2019) used an innovation tournament to solicit ideas from clinicians on how their agencies could support the use of evidence-based practices.…”
Section: Innovation Processesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The approach holds the promise of a paradigm shift to close the knowledgeto-practice gap more efficiently and rapidly (2). It might allow those involved in implementing changes to "fail fast" and quickly adapt their implementation strategy to the dynamic real-world contextual changes characterizing the complex health and social care systems in which implementation takes place (1,3,4). Smith et al's (2) conceptualization is focusing on accelerating the research process, however, our understanding how to apply it in implementation practice is only just starting to emerge.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Rapid approaches applied in implementation science are covering mainly rapid data collection and analysis methods. For example, Davis and colleagues (2021) reflected on the application of rapid ethnography for contextual assessments in implementation studies (5), and Last et al (3) described a pilot study of rapid prototyping for refining implementation strategies. Other examples for rapid methods relevant to implementation science are rapid randomized controlled trials, rapid qualitative analyses, rapid-cycle evaluations, or rapid review methods (6)(7)(8)(9)(10).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%