2013
DOI: 10.1177/070674371305800605
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Continuing Education to Go: Capacity Building in Psychotherapies for Front-Line Mental Health Workers in Underserviced Communities

Abstract: Objective: To address the gaps between need and access, and between treatment guidelines and their implementation for mental illness, through capacity building of front-line health workers. Methods:Following a learning needs assessment, work-based continuing education courses in evidence-supported psychotherapies were developed for front-line workers in underserviced community settings. The 5-hour courses on the fundamentals of cognitivebehavioural therapy, interpersonal psychotherapy, motivational interviewin… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…Partnering with stakeholders to evaluate the uptake, cost-effectiveness, and sustainability of evidence-based treatments is critical (59) as well as building capacity among existing front-line service providers to deliver early ED screening and treatment (58, 60). Training strategies (e.g., “train-the-trainer”) that extend routine training and supervision may accomplish this aim (61); online training offers the possibility for extending the reach of training (62).…”
Section: Future Directionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Partnering with stakeholders to evaluate the uptake, cost-effectiveness, and sustainability of evidence-based treatments is critical (59) as well as building capacity among existing front-line service providers to deliver early ED screening and treatment (58, 60). Training strategies (e.g., “train-the-trainer”) that extend routine training and supervision may accomplish this aim (61); online training offers the possibility for extending the reach of training (62).…”
Section: Future Directionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Despite not having specific access statistics on the educational platform, there was a general understanding by INTREC faculty and students that this was underutilised. Interaction with other students can be perceived as very beneficial when it occurs in person, such as in the Block 2 and 3 workshops, as it can improve cohesiveness and morale [31]. However, when these interactions are facilitated online their benefit is often not considered as useful [32, 33].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Global mental healthcare providers face several challenges, particularly in underserved and rural areas. These challenges include not only insufficient training but also a lack of physical resources, heavy caseloads, limited time, and the absence of referral services [7]. Training programs for psychiatrists are present in only 55% of low-income countries, 69% of low-middle-income countries, and 60% of uppermiddle-income countries [8].…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Training programs for psychiatrists are present in only 55% of low-income countries, 69% of low-middle-income countries, and 60% of uppermiddle-income countries [8]. Gaps in delivering mental health training can be mitigated through continued training [8], which has proven to be one effective way to undertake challenges brought by disparities [7]. However, continued education is not easily accessible to many health providers due to time constraints, expenses, and geographic barriers [7].…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%