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Examining the Feasibility of Implementing Digital Mental Health Innovations Into Hospitals to Support Youth in Suicide Crisis: Interview Study With Young People and Health Professionals

BACKGROUND: Hospitals are insufficiently resourced to appropriately support young people who present with suicidal crises. Digital mental health innovations have the potential to provide cost-effective models of care to address this service gap and improve care experiences for young people. However,...

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Autores principales: Rheinberger, Demee, Baffsky, Rachel, McGillivray, Lauren, Zbukvic, Isabel, Dadich, Ann, Larsen, Mark Erik, Lin, Ping-I, Gan, Daniel Z Q, Kaplun, Catherine, Wilcox, Holly C, Eapen, Valsamma, Middleton, Paul M, Torok, Michelle
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10690533/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37971790
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/51398
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author Rheinberger, Demee
Baffsky, Rachel
McGillivray, Lauren
Zbukvic, Isabel
Dadich, Ann
Larsen, Mark Erik
Lin, Ping-I
Gan, Daniel Z Q
Kaplun, Catherine
Wilcox, Holly C
Eapen, Valsamma
Middleton, Paul M
Torok, Michelle
author_facet Rheinberger, Demee
Baffsky, Rachel
McGillivray, Lauren
Zbukvic, Isabel
Dadich, Ann
Larsen, Mark Erik
Lin, Ping-I
Gan, Daniel Z Q
Kaplun, Catherine
Wilcox, Holly C
Eapen, Valsamma
Middleton, Paul M
Torok, Michelle
author_sort Rheinberger, Demee
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Hospitals are insufficiently resourced to appropriately support young people who present with suicidal crises. Digital mental health innovations have the potential to provide cost-effective models of care to address this service gap and improve care experiences for young people. However, little is currently known about whether digital innovations are feasible to integrate into complex hospital settings or how they should be introduced for sustainability. OBJECTIVE: This qualitative study explored the potential benefits, barriers, and collective action required for integrating digital therapeutics for the management of suicidal distress in youth into routine hospital practice. Addressing these knowledge gaps is a critical first step in designing digital innovations and implementation strategies that enable uptake and integration. METHODS: We conducted a series of semistructured interviews with young people who had presented to an Australian hospital for a suicide crisis in the previous 12 months and hospital staff who interacted with these young people. Participants were recruited from the community nationally via social media advertisements on the web. Interviews were conducted individually, and participants were reimbursed for their time. Using the Normalization Process Theory framework, we developed an interview guide to clarify the processes and conditions that influence whether and how an innovation becomes part of routine practice in complex health systems. RESULTS: Analysis of 29 interviews (n=17, 59% young people and n=12, 41% hospital staff) yielded 4 themes that were mapped onto 3 Normalization Process Theory constructs related to coherence building, cognitive participation, and collective action. Overall, digital innovations were seen as a beneficial complement to but not a substitute for in-person clinical services. The timing of delivery was important, with the agreement that digital therapeutics could be provided to patients while they were waiting to be assessed or shortly before discharge. Staff training to increase digital literacy was considered key to implementation, but there were mixed views on the level of staff assistance needed to support young people in engaging with digital innovations. Improving access to technological devices and internet connectivity, increasing staff motivation to facilitate the use of the digital therapeutic, and allowing patients autonomy over the use of the digital therapeutic were identified as other factors critical to integration. CONCLUSIONS: Integrating digital innovations into current models of patient care for young people presenting to hospital in acute suicide crises is challenging because of several existing resource, logistical, and technical barriers. Scoping the appropriateness of new innovations with relevant key stakeholders as early as possible in the development process should be prioritized as the best opportunity to preemptively identify and address barriers to implementation.
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spelling pubmed-106905332023-12-02 Examining the Feasibility of Implementing Digital Mental Health Innovations Into Hospitals to Support Youth in Suicide Crisis: Interview Study With Young People and Health Professionals Rheinberger, Demee Baffsky, Rachel McGillivray, Lauren Zbukvic, Isabel Dadich, Ann Larsen, Mark Erik Lin, Ping-I Gan, Daniel Z Q Kaplun, Catherine Wilcox, Holly C Eapen, Valsamma Middleton, Paul M Torok, Michelle JMIR Form Res Original Paper BACKGROUND: Hospitals are insufficiently resourced to appropriately support young people who present with suicidal crises. Digital mental health innovations have the potential to provide cost-effective models of care to address this service gap and improve care experiences for young people. However, little is currently known about whether digital innovations are feasible to integrate into complex hospital settings or how they should be introduced for sustainability. OBJECTIVE: This qualitative study explored the potential benefits, barriers, and collective action required for integrating digital therapeutics for the management of suicidal distress in youth into routine hospital practice. Addressing these knowledge gaps is a critical first step in designing digital innovations and implementation strategies that enable uptake and integration. METHODS: We conducted a series of semistructured interviews with young people who had presented to an Australian hospital for a suicide crisis in the previous 12 months and hospital staff who interacted with these young people. Participants were recruited from the community nationally via social media advertisements on the web. Interviews were conducted individually, and participants were reimbursed for their time. Using the Normalization Process Theory framework, we developed an interview guide to clarify the processes and conditions that influence whether and how an innovation becomes part of routine practice in complex health systems. RESULTS: Analysis of 29 interviews (n=17, 59% young people and n=12, 41% hospital staff) yielded 4 themes that were mapped onto 3 Normalization Process Theory constructs related to coherence building, cognitive participation, and collective action. Overall, digital innovations were seen as a beneficial complement to but not a substitute for in-person clinical services. The timing of delivery was important, with the agreement that digital therapeutics could be provided to patients while they were waiting to be assessed or shortly before discharge. Staff training to increase digital literacy was considered key to implementation, but there were mixed views on the level of staff assistance needed to support young people in engaging with digital innovations. Improving access to technological devices and internet connectivity, increasing staff motivation to facilitate the use of the digital therapeutic, and allowing patients autonomy over the use of the digital therapeutic were identified as other factors critical to integration. CONCLUSIONS: Integrating digital innovations into current models of patient care for young people presenting to hospital in acute suicide crises is challenging because of several existing resource, logistical, and technical barriers. Scoping the appropriateness of new innovations with relevant key stakeholders as early as possible in the development process should be prioritized as the best opportunity to preemptively identify and address barriers to implementation. JMIR Publications 2023-11-16 /pmc/articles/PMC10690533/ /pubmed/37971790 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/51398 Text en ©Demee Rheinberger, Rachel Baffsky, Lauren McGillivray, Isabel Zbukvic, Ann Dadich, Mark Erik Larsen, Ping-I Lin, Daniel Z Q Gan, Catherine Kaplun, Holly C Wilcox, Valsamma Eapen, Paul M Middleton, Michelle Torok. Originally published in JMIR Formative Research (https://formative.jmir.org), 16.11.2023. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in JMIR Formative Research, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on https://formative.jmir.org, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.
spellingShingle Original Paper
Rheinberger, Demee
Baffsky, Rachel
McGillivray, Lauren
Zbukvic, Isabel
Dadich, Ann
Larsen, Mark Erik
Lin, Ping-I
Gan, Daniel Z Q
Kaplun, Catherine
Wilcox, Holly C
Eapen, Valsamma
Middleton, Paul M
Torok, Michelle
Examining the Feasibility of Implementing Digital Mental Health Innovations Into Hospitals to Support Youth in Suicide Crisis: Interview Study With Young People and Health Professionals
title Examining the Feasibility of Implementing Digital Mental Health Innovations Into Hospitals to Support Youth in Suicide Crisis: Interview Study With Young People and Health Professionals
title_full Examining the Feasibility of Implementing Digital Mental Health Innovations Into Hospitals to Support Youth in Suicide Crisis: Interview Study With Young People and Health Professionals
title_fullStr Examining the Feasibility of Implementing Digital Mental Health Innovations Into Hospitals to Support Youth in Suicide Crisis: Interview Study With Young People and Health Professionals
title_full_unstemmed Examining the Feasibility of Implementing Digital Mental Health Innovations Into Hospitals to Support Youth in Suicide Crisis: Interview Study With Young People and Health Professionals
title_short Examining the Feasibility of Implementing Digital Mental Health Innovations Into Hospitals to Support Youth in Suicide Crisis: Interview Study With Young People and Health Professionals
title_sort examining the feasibility of implementing digital mental health innovations into hospitals to support youth in suicide crisis: interview study with young people and health professionals
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10690533/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37971790
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/51398
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