686 results on '"Lau, Anna S."'
Search Results
2. Validating a Pragmatic Measure of Evidence-Based Practice (EBP) Delivery: Therapist Reports of EBP Strategy Delivery and Associations with Child Outcome Trajectories
- Author
-
Lau, Anna S., Lind, Teresa, Cox, Julia, Motamedi, Mojdeh, Lui, Joyce H. L., Chlebowski, Colby, Flores, Ashley, Diaz, Devynne, Roesch, Scott, and Brookman-Frazee, Lauren
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Observed Engagement in Community Implemented Evidence-Based Practices for Children and Adolescents: Implications for Practice Delivery
- Author
-
Wright, Blanche, Brookman-Frazee, Lauren, Kim, Joanna J, Gellatly, Resham, Kuckertz, Mary, and Lau, Anna S
- Subjects
Clinical Research ,Pediatric Research Initiative ,Pediatric ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Humans ,Child ,Adolescent ,Female ,Male ,Evidence-Based Practice ,Caregivers ,Psychology ,Cognitive Sciences ,Developmental & Child Psychology - Abstract
ObjectiveThis observational study characterizes youth and caregiver behaviors that may pose challenges to engagement within a system-driven implementation of multiple evidence-based practices (EBPs). We examined links between Engagement Challenges and therapist EBP implementation outcomes.MethodCommunity therapists (N = 102) provided audio recordings of EBP sessions (N = 666) for youth (N = 267; 71.54%, Latinx; 51.69%, female; Mage = 9.85, Range: 1-18). Observers rated the extent to which youth and/or caregivers engaged in the following behaviors: Caregiver and/or Youth Expressed Concerns about interventions, and Youth Disruptive Behaviors. Multilevel modeling was used to identify predictors of observable Engagement Challenges, and examine associations between Engagement Challenges, and therapist-reported ability to deliver planned activities, and observer-rated extensiveness of EBP strategy delivery.ResultsAt least one Engagement Challenge was observed in 43.99% of sessions. Youth Engagement Challenges were not associated with outcomes. Caregiver Expressed Concerns were negatively associated with therapist-reported ability to carry out planned session activities (B = -.21, 95% CI[-.39-(-.02)], p
- Published
- 2023
4. Temporal Orientation and the Association Between Adverse Life Events and Internalizing Symptoms in Vietnamese American and European American Adolescents
- Author
-
Zax, Alexandra, Tsai, William, Lau, Anna S., Weiss, Bahr, and Gudiño, Omar G.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Scaling-up Child and Youth Mental Health Services: Assessing Coverage of a County-Wide Prevention and Early Intervention Initiative During One Fiscal Year
- Author
-
Hooley, Cole, Salvo, Deborah, Brown, Derek S, Brookman-Frazee, Lauren, Lau, Anna S, Brownson, Ross C, Fowler, Patrick J, Innes-Gomberg, Debbie, and Proctor, Enola K
- Subjects
Health Services and Systems ,Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Pediatric ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Prevention ,Health Services ,Mental Health ,8.1 Organisation and delivery of services ,Health and social care services research ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Humans ,Child ,Adolescent ,Mental Health Services ,Early Intervention ,Educational ,Health Services Needs and Demand ,Ambulatory Care Facilities ,scale-up ,mental health ,mental health services ,children and youth ,evidence-based practice ,implementation science ,Clinical Sciences ,Public Health and Health Services ,Psychology ,Psychiatry ,Health services and systems ,Applied and developmental psychology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
PurposeIn the U.S., the percentage of youth in need of evidence-based mental health practices (EBPs) who receive them (i.e., coverage rate) is low. We know little about what influences coverage rates. In 2010, the Los Angeles County Department of Mental Health (LACDMH) launched a reimbursement-driven implementation of multiple EBPs in youth mental health care. This study examines two questions: (1) What was the coverage rate of EBPs delivered three years following initial implementation? (2) What factors are associated with the coverage rates?MethodsTo assess coverage rates of publicly insured youth, we used LACDMH administrative claims data from July 1, 2013 to June 30, 2014 and estimates of the size of the targeted eligible youth population from the 2014 American Community Survey (ACS). The unit of analysis was clinic service areas (n = 254). We used Geographic Information Systems and an OLS regression to assess community and clinic characteristics related to coverage.ResultsThe county coverage rate was estimated at 17%, much higher than national estimates. The proportion of ethnic minorities, individuals who are foreign-born, adults with a college degree within a geographic area were negatively associated with clinic service area coverage rates. Having more therapists who speak a language other than English, providing care outside of clinics, and higher proportion of households without a car were associated with higher coverage rates.ConclusionHeterogeneity in municipal mental health record type and availability makes it difficult to compare the LACDMH coverage rate with other efforts. However, the LACDMH initiative has higher coverage than published national rates. Having bilingual therapists and providing services outside the clinic was associated with higher coverage. Even with higher coverage, inequities persisted.
- Published
- 2023
6. Supporting Emotionally Exhausted Community Mental Health Therapists in Appropriately Adapting EBPs for Children and Adolescents
- Author
-
Motamedi, Mojdeh, Lau, Anna S., Byeon, Y. Vivian, Yu, Stephanie H., and Brookman-Frazee, Lauren
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Inpatient Care Utilization Following Mobile Crisis Response Encounters Among Racial/Ethnic Minoritized Youth
- Author
-
Lui, Joyce H.L., Chen, Belinda C., Benson, Lisa A., Lin, Yen-Jui R., Ruiz, Amanda, and Lau, Anna S.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Misalignment in Community Mental Health Leader and Therapist Ratings of Psychological Safety Climate Predicts Therapist Self-Efficacy with Evidence-Based Practices (EBPs)
- Author
-
Byeon, Y. Vivian, Brookman-Frazee, Lauren, Aarons, Gregory A., and Lau, Anna S.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Immigration stress and internalizing symptoms among Latinx and Asian American students: The roles of school climate and community violence
- Author
-
Wright, Blanche, Chen, Belinda C., Kodish, Tamar, Meza Lazaro, Yazmin, and Lau, Anna S.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Enhancing Racial/Ethnic Equity in College Student Mental Health Through Innovative Screening and Treatment
- Author
-
Kodish, Tamar, Lau, Anna S, Gong-Guy, Elizabeth, Congdon, Eliza, Arnaudova, Inna, Schmidt, Madison, Shoemaker, Lauren, and Craske, Michelle G
- Subjects
Clinical and Health Psychology ,Psychology ,Brain Disorders ,Depression ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental Health ,Pediatric ,Health Services ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Ethnicity ,Humans ,Racial Groups ,Students ,Universities ,Clinical Sciences ,Public Health and Health Services ,Psychiatry ,Health services and systems ,Applied and developmental psychology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
Although college campuses are diversifying rapidly, students of color remain an underserved and understudied group. Online screening and subsequent allocation to treatment represents a pathway to enhancing equity in college student mental health. The purpose of the current study was to evaluate racial/ethnic differences in mental health problems and treatment enrollment within the context of a largescale screening and treatment research initiative on a diverse college campus. The sample was comprised of n = 2090 college students who completed an online mental health screening survey and were offered either free online or face-to-face treatment based on symptom severity as a part of a research study. A series of ordinal, binomial and multinomial logistic regression models were specified to examine racial/ethnic differences in mental health problems, prior treatment receipt, and enrollment in online and face-to-face treatment through the campus-wide research initiative. Racial/ethnic differences in depression, anxiety and suicidality endorsed in the screening survey were identified. Students of color were less likely to have received prior mental health treatment compared to non-Hispanic white students, but were equally likely to enroll in and initiate online and face-to-face treatment offered through the current research initiative. Rates of enrollment in online therapy were comparable to prior studies. Online screening and treatment may be an effective avenue to reaching underserved students of color with mental health needs on college campuses. Digital mental health tools hold significant promise for bridging gaps in care, but efforts to improve uptake and engagement are needed.
- Published
- 2022
11. Organizational factors associated with community therapists’ self-efficacy in EBP delivery: The interplay between sustainment leadership, sustainment climate, and psychological safety
- Author
-
Byeon, Y Vivian, Lau, Anna S, Lind, Teresa, Hamilton, Alison B, and Brookman-Frazee, Lauren
- Subjects
Health Services and Systems ,Health Sciences ,Psychology ,Pediatric Research Initiative ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental Health ,Clinical Research ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,inner context ,mental health workforce ,organizational climate ,psychological safety ,self-efficacy ,sustainment climate ,sustainment leadership - Abstract
BackgroundInner context organizational factors proximally shape therapist experiences with evidence-based practice (EBP) implementation and may influence therapist self-efficacy, which has been linked to sustained use of EBPs in community mental health settings. Research has primarily focused on constructs such as implementation leadership and climate. However, the effects of such factors may depend upon other inner context dimensions, such as psychological safety. Psychologically safe environments are conducive to taking risks, speaking up about problems, and requesting feedback and may promote therapist self-efficacy during implementation. This study examines whether organizational sustainment leadership and sustainment climate relate to therapist EBP self-efficacy only under conditions of psychological safety.MethodsData were collected from 410 clinicians in 85 programs during the sustainment phase of a system-driven implementation of multiple EBPs in children's mental health services. Therapists reported on their organization's sustainment leadership, sustainment climate, psychological safety, and their own self-efficacy in delivering specific EBPs. Multilevel regression analyses were conducted to account for nested data structure.ResultsAmong program-level variables, sustainment leadership and psychological safety both significantly predicted therapist self-efficacy. However, there were no significant interactions between program-level sustainment climate and psychological safety. Exploratory post-hoc analyses revealed a significant interaction between program-level sustainment leadership and therapist-level perceptions of psychological safety such that that the conditional effect of psychological safety on EBP self-efficacy was significant at high levels of sustainment leadership, but not at low or average levels.ConclusionWe noted independent links between sustainment leadership, organizational psychological safety and therapists feelings of confidence and mastery with EBPs. Therapists' individual perceptions of psychological safety were linked to self-efficacy only in programs with high sustainment leadership. Thus, sustainment leadership and psychological safety may both represent implementation intervention targets, but it may not be critical to assess for perceptions of psychological safety before deploying organizational leadership strategies.Plain language abstract Therapist self-efficacy is a therapist's belief that they are capable, knowledgeable, and skilled enough to deliver evidence-based practices (EBPs), and is thought to promote improved clinical and implementation outcomes, such as therapists' sustained use of EBPs. Conditions within community mental health organizations may influence therapists' sense of EBP self-efficacy. Leaders' support and expectations for EBP implementation, and collective staff perceptions about the organization's climate to support EBPs are linked to positive therapist attitudes and EBP adoption. However, less is known about how these implementation-specific organizational factors associated with therapist EBP self-efficacy in the long-term, and how this may depend on general workplace conditions. Specifically, psychologically safe environments - where therapists feel safe taking risks such as asking questions, admitting mistakes, and trying new skills - may be needed to promote self-efficacy when therapists are tasked with learning and using complex multi-component EBP innovations. The current study tested the prediction that leader-driven and program-wide focus on EBP sustainment may promote therapist EBP self-efficacy only in organizations where conditions for learning are psychologically safe. Our findings confirmed that fostering strong sustainment focused leadership and psychologically safe environments may each be important for increasing therapists' EBP self-efficacy. The model results suggested that individual therapist perceptions of psychological safety were more strongly related to EBP self-efficacy in programs with greater implementation leadership. Findings suggest the importance of increasing EBP leadership behavior to fully potentiate other facilitating conditions for therapist learning in the sustainment phase of EBP implementation initiatives.
- Published
- 2022
12. Therapist adaptations to evidence-based practices and associations with implementation outcomes in child therapy sessions.
- Author
-
Yu, Stephanie H, Brookman-Frazee, Lauren, Kim, Joanna J, Barnett, Miya L, Wright, Blanche, and Lau, Anna S
- Subjects
Humans ,Family ,Mental Health Services ,Child ,Female ,Male ,Evidence-Based Practice ,Hispanic or Latino ,Pediatric ,Clinical Research ,Good Health and Well Being ,evidence-based practice ,adaptation ,community implementation ,diverse youth ,Psychology ,Clinical Psychology - Abstract
ObjectiveCommunity therapists inevitably adapt evidence-based practices (EBPs) to meet the needs of their clients and practice settings. Yet, the implications of spontaneous, therapist-driven adaptations for EBP implementation outcomes are not well understood. We used a sequential QUAN → qual mixed-methods design to examine how different types of therapist-described adaptations were associated with observer-rated extensiveness of therapist delivery of EBP content and technique strategies at the session level.MethodData were drawn from an observational study of a system-driven implementation of multiple EBPs into public children's mental health services. Community therapists (n = 103) described adaptations they made in 680 sessions with 273 clients (50.92% female, 49.08% male, Mage = 9.72 years, 70.70% Hispanic/Latinx). Coders classified therapist-described adaptations into five types: (a) Modifying Presentation, (b) Integrating, (c) Extending, (d) Reducing, and (e) Generalizing. Independent observers rated the extensiveness of EBP strategy delivery from session recordings using the EBP Concordant Care Assessment (ECCA) Observational Coding System.ResultsQuantitative analyses using multilevel regression revealed that Modifying Presentation adaptations were associated with higher extensiveness of EBP technique delivery, whereas Extending adaptations were associated with lower extensiveness of EBP content and technique delivery. Qualitative analysis of adaptation descriptions identified explanations for the quantitative findings.ConclusionsFindings suggest that Modifying Presentation adaptations, associated with higher extensiveness, involved creative use of activities and materials, language modification, and personalization of EBP content to meet clients' diverse needs, whereas Extending adaptations, associated with lower extensiveness, involved slowing EBP pacing in response to client challenges. Implications for provider training are discussed. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).
- Published
- 2022
13. Leader and Provider Perspectives on Implementing Safe Alternatives for Teens and Youth—Acute (SAFETY-A) in Public School Districts Serving Racial/Ethnic Minoritized Youth
- Author
-
Yu, Stephanie H., Kodish, Tamar, Bear, Laurel, O’Neill, J. Conor, Asarnow, Joan R., Goldston, David B., Cheng, Karli K., Wang, Xinran, Vargas, Sylvanna M., and Lau, Anna S.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Longitudinal Relations between Emotion Restraint Values, Life Stress, and Internalizing Symptoms among Vietnamese American and European American Adolescents
- Author
-
Tsai, William, Weiss, Bahr, Kim, Jacqueline HJ, and Lau, Anna S
- Subjects
Clinical and Health Psychology ,Social and Personality Psychology ,Psychology ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental Health ,Mind and Body ,Depression ,Pediatric ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Anxiety ,Asian ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Emotions ,Humans ,Stress ,Psychological ,United States ,Cognitive Sciences ,Developmental & Child Psychology ,Applied and developmental psychology ,Clinical and health psychology ,Social and personality psychology - Abstract
Objective: Recent research has documented cultural differences in the extent and manner in which various forms of emotion regulation are linked with psychological well-being. Most of these studies, however, have been cross-sectional, nor have they directly examined the values underlying the use of emotion regulation. The present study examined emotion restraint values and their interactions with life stress in predicting internalizing symptoms across time among Vietnamese American and European American adolescents. The study focused on adolescence as a critical developmental period during which life stress and internalizing symptoms increase significantly. Method: Vietnamese American (n = 372) and European American (n = 304) adolescents' levels of emotion restraint values, internalizing symptoms, and stress were assessed at two timepoints six months apart. Results: Results indicated differential associations between emotion restraint values, stress, and symptoms over time for the two groups. For Vietnamese American adolescents, emotion restraint values did not predict depressive, anxiety, or somatic symptoms. For European American adolescents, emotion restraint values predicted higher somatic symptoms but buffered against the effects of interpersonal stress on anxiety and depressive symptoms. Conclusions: These results provide increased understanding of the role of values related to emotion restraint in shaping adolescent internalizing symptoms and responses to stress across cultural groups. Implications of the findings for guiding intervention efforts are discussed.
- Published
- 2021
15. Shared decision making between community therapists and Latinx caregivers during evidence-based practice delivery in publicly-funded children’s mental health services
- Author
-
Wright, Blanche, Brookman-Frazee, Lauren, Alegría, Margarita, Langer, David, and Lau, Anna S.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Therapist-Observer Concordance in Ratings of EBP Strategy Delivery: Challenges and Targeted Directions in Pursuing Pragmatic Measurement in Children’s Mental Health Services
- Author
-
Brookman-Frazee, Lauren, Stadnick, Nicole A, Lind, Teresa, Roesch, Scott, Terrones, Laura, Barnett, Miya L, Regan, Jennifer, Kennedy, Catherine A, F. Garland, Ann, and Lau, Anna S
- Subjects
Pediatric ,Mental Health ,Pediatric Research Initiative ,Clinical Research ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Attitude of Health Personnel ,Child ,Evidence-Based Practice ,Humans ,Mental Health Services ,Psychotherapy ,Evidence-based practice implementation ,Pragmatic measures ,Community mental health ,Clinical Sciences ,Public Health and Health Services ,Psychology ,Psychiatry - Abstract
Pragmatic measures of therapist delivery of evidence-based practice (EBP) are critical to assessing the impact of large-scale, multiple EBP implementation efforts. As an initial step in the development of pragmatic measurement, the current study examined the concordance between therapist and observer ratings of items assessing delivery of EBP strategies considered essential for common child EBP targets. Possible EBP-, session-, and therapist-levels factors associated with concordance were also explored. Therapists and independent observers rated the extensiveness of therapist (n = 103) EBP strategy delivery in 680 community psychotherapy sessions in which six EBPs were used. Concordance between therapist- and observer-report of the extensiveness of therapist EBP strategy use was at least fair (ICC ≥ .40) for approximately half of the items. Greater therapist-observer concordance was observed in sessions where a structured EBP was delivered and in sessions where therapists reported being able to carry out planned activities. Findings highlighted conditions that may improve or hinder therapists' ability to report on their own EBP strategy delivery in a way that is consistent with independent observers. These results can help inform the development of pragmatic therapist-report measures of EBP strategy delivery and implementation efforts more broadly.
- Published
- 2021
17. Train-to-Sustain: Predictors of Sustainment in a Large-Scale Implementation of Parent-Child Interaction Therapy.
- Author
-
Barnett, Miya L, Brookman-Frazee, Lauren, Yu, Stephanie H, Lind, Teresa, Lui, Joyce HL, Timmer, Susan, Boys, Deanna, Urquiza, Anthony, Innes-Gomberg, Debbie, Quick-Abdullah, Daphne, and Lau, Anna S
- Subjects
community implementation ,evidence-based practice ,parent-child interaction therapy ,survival analysis ,sustainment ,Clinical Research ,Good Health and Well Being - Abstract
Sustainment of evidence-based practices is necessary to ensure their public health impact. The current study examined predictors of sustainment of Parent-Child Interaction Therapy (PCIT) within a large-scale system-driven implementation effort in Los Angeles County. Data were drawn from PCIT training data and county administrative claims between January 2013 and March 2018. Participants included 241 therapists from 61 programs. Two sustainment outcomes were examined at the therapist- and program-levels: 1) PCIT claim volume and 2) PCIT claim discontinuation (discontinuation of claims during study period; survival time of claiming in months). Predictors included therapist- and program-level caseload, training, and workforce characteristics. On average, therapists and programs continued claiming to PCIT for 17.7 and 32.3 months, respectively. Across the sustainment outcomes, there were both shared and unshared significant predictors. For therapists, case-mix fit (higher proportions of young child clients with externalizing disorders) and participation in additional PCIT training activities significantly predicted claims volume. Furthermore, additional training activity participation was associated with lower likelihood of therapist PCIT claim discontinuation in the follow-up period. Programs with therapists eligible to be internal trainers were significantly less likely to discontinue PCIT claiming. Findings suggest that PCIT sustainment may be facilitated by implementation strategies including targeted outreach to ensure eligible families in therapist caseloads, facilitating therapist engagement in advanced trainings, and building internal infrastructure through train-the-trainer programs.
- Published
- 2021
18. Caregiver Attendance as a Quality Indicator in the Implementation of Multiple Evidence-Based Practices for Children
- Author
-
Barnett, Miya L, Lau, Anna S, Lind, Teresa, Wright, Blanche, Stadnick, Nicole A, Innes-Gomberg, Debbie, Pesanti, Keri, and Brookman-Frazee, Lauren
- Subjects
Clinical and Health Psychology ,Psychology ,Health Services ,Pediatric ,Mental Health ,Pediatric Research Initiative ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Caregivers ,Child ,Evidence-Based Practice ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Quality Indicators ,Health Care ,Cognitive Sciences ,Developmental & Child Psychology ,Applied and developmental psychology ,Clinical and health psychology ,Social and personality psychology - Abstract
ObjectiveThis study investigated a quality indicator for children's mental health, caregiver attendance in youth psychotherapy sessions, within a system-driven implementation of multiple evidence-based practices (EBPs) in children's community mental health services.MethodAdministrative claims from nine fiscal years were analyzed to characterize and predict caregiver attendance. Data included characteristics of therapists (n = 8,626), youth clients (n = 134,368), sessions (e.g., individual, family), and the EBP delivered. Clients were primarily Latinx (63%), male (54%) and mean age was 11; they presented with a range of mental health problems. Three-level mixed models were conducted to examine the association between therapist, youth, service, EBP characteristics and caregiver attendance.ResultsCaregivers attended, on average, 46.0% of sessions per client for the full sample and 59.6% of sessions for clients who were clinically indicated, based on age and presenting problem, to receive caregiver-focused treatment. Following initial EBP implementation, the proportion of caregiver attendance in sessions increased over time. Caregivers attended a higher proportion of youth psychotherapy sessions when clients were younger, had an externalizing disorder, were non-Hispanic White, and were male. Further, higher proportions of caregiver attendance occurred when services were delivered in a clinic setting (compared with school and other settings), by bilingual therapists, and the EBP prescribed caregiver attendance in all sessions.ConclusionsOverall, the patterns of caregiver attendance appear consistent with evidence-informed practice parameters of client presenting problem and age. Yet, several improvement targets emerged such as client racial/ethnic background and service setting. Potential reasons for these disparities are discussed.
- Published
- 2020
19. Service use by youth with autism within a system-driven implementation of evidence-based practices in children’s mental health services
- Author
-
Stadnick, Nicole A, Lau, Anna S, Dickson, Kelsey S, Pesanti, Keri, Innes-Gomberg, Debbie, and Brookman-Frazee, Lauren
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Psychology ,Clinical Research ,Pediatric ,Brain Disorders ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental Health ,Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities (IDD) ,Autism ,Health Services ,8.1 Organisation and delivery of services ,Health and social care services research ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Autism Spectrum Disorder ,Autistic Disorder ,Case-Control Studies ,Child ,Evidence-Based Practice ,Humans ,Mental Health Services ,United States ,autism spectrum disorder ,evidence-based practices ,implementation ,mental health services ,youth ,Specialist Studies in Education ,Cognitive Sciences ,Developmental & Child Psychology ,Biomedical and clinical sciences - Abstract
Public mental health systems play an important role in caring for youth with autism spectrum disorder. Like other dually diagnosed populations, youth with autism spectrum disorder may receive services in the context of evidence-based practice implementation efforts within public mental health systems. Little is known about service use patterns within the context of system-driven implementations efforts for this population. This case-control study examined mental health service patterns of 2537 youth with autism spectrum disorder compared to 2537 matched peers receiving care in the Los Angeles County Department of Mental Health, the largest public mental health department in the United States, within the context of a system-driven implementation of multiple evidence-based practices. Although not the primary target of this implementation effort, youth with autism spectrum disorder were served when they met criteria for the services based on their presenting mental health symptoms. Comparative analyses using administrative claims data were conducted to examine differences in mental health utilization patterns and clinical characteristics. Findings revealed significant differences in the volume and duration of mental health services as well as differences in the service type and evidence-based practice delivered between youth with and without autism spectrum disorder. Results provide direction targeting implementation efforts for youth with autism spectrum disorder within a public mental health system care reform.
- Published
- 2020
20. Emergent life events in the delivery of a caregiver-mediated evidence-based intervention for children with autism spectrum disorder in publicly funded mental health services.
- Author
-
Lind, Teresa, Lau, Anna S, Gomez, Christopher, Rodriguez, Adriana, Guan, Karen, Chlebowski, Colby, Zhang, Aimee, Chorpita, Bruce, and Brookman-Frazee, Lauren
- Subjects
Humans ,Mental Health ,Mental Health Services ,Evidence-Based Medicine ,Child ,Caregivers ,Autism Spectrum Disorder ,autism spectrum disorder ,emergent life events ,evidence-based intervention ,fidelity ,implementation ,mental health services ,Brain Disorders ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Autism ,Clinical Research ,Pediatric ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities (IDD) ,6.6 Psychological and behavioural ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Specialist Studies in Education ,Psychology ,Cognitive Sciences ,Developmental & Child Psychology - Abstract
Lay abstractMental health clinicians often report significant challenges when delivering evidence-based interventions (EBI) in community settings, particularly when unexpected client stressors (or emergent life events; ELEs) interfere with the therapy process. The current study sought to extend the study of ELEs to children with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) by examining the occurrence and impact of ELEs in the context of a collaborative, caregiver-mediated intervention for reducing challenging behaviors in children with ASD. This intervention was An Individualized Mental Health Intervention for children with ASD (referred to as AIM HI). Participants included 38 clinicians and child clients who were enrolled in a community effectiveness trial of AIM HI. Video recordings of 100 therapy sessions were coded for caregiver-reported ELEs and also how well clinicians adhered to the AIM HI protocol. Results indicated that mild to severe ELEs were reported in 36% of therapy sessions, and were reported for 58% of children at some point during the intervention. Children who had a greater number of diagnoses (in addition to the autism diagnosis) tended to have more ELEs. In addition, clinicians with less years of experience tended to have sessions with more ELEs. There was no significant link between ELEs and how well clinicians adhered to the AIM HI protocol. Findings offer implications for the implementation of EBI, particularly the importance of incorporating clinician training in addressing complex presentations and crises in the context of EBIs.
- Published
- 2020
21. How community therapists describe adapting evidence‐based practices in sessions for youth: Augmenting to improve fit and reach
- Author
-
Kim, Joanna J, Brookman‐Frazee, Lauren, Barnett, Miya L, Tran, Melanie, Kuckertz, Mary, Yu, Stephanie, and Lau, Anna S
- Subjects
Pediatric ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Attitude of Health Personnel ,Child ,Evidence-Based Practice ,Female ,Humans ,Implementation Science ,Male ,Mental Health Services ,Parenting ,Psychotherapy ,Psychology ,Developmental & Child Psychology - Abstract
The study sought to (a) characterize the types and frequency of session-level adaptations made to multiple evidence-based practices (EBPs) and (b) identify therapist-, client-, and session-level predictors of adaptations. Within the community implementation of multiple EBPs, 103 community mental health therapists reported on 731 therapy sessions for 280 clients. Therapists indicated whether they adapted EBPs in specific sessions and described adaptations in open-ended responses. Responses were coded using the Augmenting and Reducing adaptations framework. Therapists reported making adaptations in 59% of sessions. Augmenting adaptations were reported more frequently than Reducing adaptations. Multilevel logistic regression analyses revealed that greater therapist openness to EBPs, younger child age, and presenting problems was associated with Augmenting adaptations. Child presenting problem of externalizing problems predicted fewer Reducing adaptations compared with internalizing problems. This study extends the growing research examining adaptations within the context of the system-driven implementation of multiple EBPs by applying the Augmenting and Reducing adaptation framework to the session-level.
- Published
- 2020
22. Leveraging implementation science to reduce inequities in Children’s mental health care: highlights from a multidisciplinary international colloquium
- Author
-
Stadnick, Nicole A, Aarons, Gregory A, Blake, Lucy, Brookman-Frazee, Lauren I, Dourgnon, Paul, Engell, Thomas, Jusot, Florence, Lau, Anna S, Prieur, Constance, Skar, Ane-Marthe Solheim, and Barnett, Miya L
- Subjects
Health Services and Systems ,Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Health Services ,Clinical Research ,Mental Health ,Pediatric ,Health and social care services research ,8.3 Policy ,ethics ,and research governance ,8.1 Organisation and delivery of services ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Child ,Equity ,Implementation science ,International - Abstract
Background and purposeAccess to evidence-based mental health care for children is an international priority. However, there are significant challenges to advancing this public health priority in an efficient and equitable manner. The purpose of this international colloquium was to convene a multidisciplinary group of health researchers to build an agenda for addressing disparities in mental health care access and treatment for children and families through collaboration among scholars from the United States and Europe engaged in innovative implementation science and mental health services research.Key highlightsGuided by the Exploration, Preparation, Implementation, and Sustainment (EPIS) Framework, presentations related to inner, outer, and bridging context factors that impact the accessibility and quality of mental health evidence-based practices (EBPs) for children and families. Three common topics emerged from the presentations and discussions from colloquium participants, which included: 1) the impact of inner and outer context factors that limit accessibility to EBPs across countries, 2) strategies to adapt EBPs to improve their fit in different settings, 3) the potential for implementation science to address emerging clinical and public health concerns.ImplicationsThe common topics discussed underscored that disparities in access to evidence-based mental health care are prevalent across countries. Opportunities for cross-country and cross-discipline learnings and collaborations can help drive solutions to address these inequities, which relate to the availability of a trained and culturally appropriate workforce, insurance reimbursement policies, and designing interventions and implementation strategies to support sustained use of evidence-based practices.
- Published
- 2020
23. Predictors of Therapists Use of Homework in Community Mental Health: Session and Therapist Characteristics
- Author
-
Corona, Alexis J, Motamedi, Mojdeh, Lau, Anna S, and Brookman-Frazee, Lauren
- Subjects
evidence-based practices ,community mental health services ,homework - Abstract
Assigning and reviewing homework as a strategy to help clients gain therapeutic skills is a common technique used across a variety of evidence-based practices (EBPs) and has been shown to improve therapy outcomes for children and youth. However, in studies characterizing routine psychotherapy delivered in community mental health settings, homework is rarely used in sessions. While some therapist and client level predictors of EBP strategy use have been identified in routine psychotherapy (e.g. client stressors, therapists’ attitudes towards EBPs) it is unknown what is associated with community mental health therapists using homework in the increasingly common context of system-driven implementation of multiple EBPs. To identify predictors of therapists’ use of homework, 680 videos of sessions with 274 clients were collected from 103 therapists (of which 55% were Hispanic) providing children’s mental health services through the Los Angeles County Department of Mental Health (LACDMH). The current study uses a multilevel logistic regression analysis model to identify which factors are associated with therapist use of homework in therapy sessions when there is system-driven implementation support for the use of multiple EBPs in community mental health settings. After controlling for the EBP delivered in session and the number of EBPs therapists were trained in, having a caregiver present in the therapy session, older child age, and being an unlicensed therapist were associated with a higher likelihood of therapists assigning and reviewing homework during a specific session. Therapist race/ethnicity, perceptions of the EBP being delivered, their report of emotional exhaustion, and direct hours with clients, as well as emergent unexpected stressful client life events within a session were not significantly associated with therapists’ delivery of homework. These findings underscore the need to provide explicit attention during therapist training on the use of homework with younger clients when caregivers are absent from sessions and the need to facilitate the use of homework among licensed therapists.
- Published
- 2020
24. When Do Therapists Stop Using Evidence-Based Practices? Findings from a Mixed Method Study on System-Driven Implementation of Multiple EBPs for Children
- Author
-
Lau, Anna S, Lind, Teresa, Crawley, Morgan, Rodriguez, Adriana, Smith, Ashley, and Brookman-Frazee, Lauren
- Subjects
Allied Health and Rehabilitation Science ,Health Services and Systems ,Health Sciences ,Psychology ,Mental Health ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Pediatric ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Attitude of Health Personnel ,Child ,Evidence-Based Practice ,Humans ,Implementation Science ,Interviews as Topic ,Mental Health Services ,Occupational Stress ,Psychotherapists ,Time Factors ,Evidence-based practice ,Sustainment ,Discontinuation ,Clinical Sciences ,Public Health and Health Services ,Psychiatry ,Health services and systems ,Applied and developmental psychology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
Therapist discontinuation of delivering an evidence-based practice (EBP) is a critical outcome in the community implementation of EBPs. This mixed methods study examined factors associated with therapist discontinuation within a large reimbursement-driven implementation of multiple EBPs in public children's mental health services. The study integrated quantitative survey data from 748 therapists across 65 agencies, and qualitative interviews from a subset of 79 therapists across 14 agencies. Therapists adopted, on average, 2.41 EBPs (SD = 1.05, range = 1-5), and nearly half (n = 355, 47.5%) reported discontinuing at least one EBP. Multi-level models were used to predict the binary outcome of discontinuation, and qualitative analyses were used to expand upon quantitative findings. Quantitative models revealed that therapist factors, including fewer direct service hours per week, a greater number of EBPs adopted, higher emotional exhaustion, and more negative attitudes toward EBPs in general were associated with discontinuation. In addition, EBP-specific factors including more negative perceptions of the particular EBP and lower self-efficacy for delivering the specific EBP predicted discontinuation. Themes from interview responses highlighted the importance of fit of the EBP with the agency's client base, as well as therapist perceptions of adequate EBP training supports, and the alignment of an EBP with therapists' professional goals. Together, the findings suggest the need for strategic sustainment planning interventions that target EBP fit (i.e., fit between adopted EBPs and agency target population, fit between EBP and therapist preferences and career goals) and support therapist self-efficacy in delivering EBPs.
- Published
- 2020
25. Barriers and strategies to improve digital mental health intervention uptake among college students of color: A modified Delphi study
- Author
-
Kodish, Tamar, Schueller, Stephen M., and Lau, Anna S.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Qualitative Reports of How and When Therapists Adapt Children’s Evidence-Based Practices during Community Implementation
- Author
-
Barnett, Miya L, Brookman-Frazee, Lauren, Gonzalez, Juan Carlos, Zhan, Chanel, Rodriguez, Adriana, Stadnick, Nicole A, and Lau, Anna S
- Subjects
Clinical Research ,Pediatric ,Mental Health ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Child ,Evaluation Studies as Topic ,Evidence-Based Practice ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Public Health ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Psychology ,Cognitive Sciences ,Developmental & Child Psychology - Abstract
This study analyzed qualitative therapist reports of adaptations to the delivery of multiple evidence-based practices (EBPs) within the context of a system-driven reform of children's community mental health services to understand how therapists adapt EBPs as well as contexts of these adaptations to identify when these adaptations are made. The study sought to complement and expand upon previous quantitative survey findings of two categories of Augmenting and Reducing/Reordering adaptations to EBPs. Data included interviews from 60 therapists (88.3% female, 61.7% Latina/o, 80.0% unlicensed) across 20 program sites in 11 mental health agencies that served racial/ethnically diverse children. Interviews were coded to identify themes surrounding the types of adaptations made and the contexts for these adaptations. The majority of therapists' qualitative descriptions of adaptations converged with the 2 broad categories in the Augmenting and Reducing/Reordering Framework, with therapists describing augmenting (e.g., modifying presentation, lengthening or extending pacing) most often, and reducing/reordering adaptations were discussed less frequently. Child and family characteristics were most frequently cited as indications prompting adaptations; however, the specific characteristics motivating adaptations differed by type. Therapists reporting using augmenting adaptations in the context of a wide range of client characteristics, whereas reducing/reordering adaptations occurred more specifically as a function of clinical presentation, family and caregiver functioning, and emergent life events. Therapists described making adaptations to improve the fit of multiple EBPs for the clients they served. Findings could have implications for implementation efforts with diverse clients served in community settings.
- Published
- 2019
27. Cultural variation in temporal associations among somatic complaints, anxiety, and depressive symptoms in adolescence
- Author
-
Kim, Jacqueline HJ, Tsai, William, Kodish, Tamar, Trung, Lam T, Lau, Anna S, and Weiss, Bahr
- Subjects
Clinical and Health Psychology ,Psychology ,Depression ,Brain Disorders ,Mental Health ,Pediatric ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental health ,Adolescent ,Anxiety ,Culture ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Medically Unexplained Symptoms ,Self Report ,Asian ,Somatic ,Internalizing ,Adolescents ,Depressive ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Psychiatry ,Biological psychology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
ObjectiveDifferent domains of internalizing symptoms (somatic, anxiety, depressive) often occur concurrently, suggesting that they may share common etiology. In longitudinal analyses of internalizing among youth, anxiety is often found to precede depression. However, relatively few studies have also assessed how somatic problems, the third symptom domain, are involved in longitudinal patterns of internalizing. In addition, temporal relations among internalizing symptom domains may vary by cultural group as somatic symptoms are posited to be a more culturally-normative way of communicating or experiencing distress in non-Western, interdependent cultures. Thus, the present study examined longitudinal relations among these three internalizing symptom domains in three ethnocultural adolescent samples.Methods304 European American, 420 Vietnamese American, and 717 Vietnamese adolescents' self-reported internalizing symptoms (somatic, anxiety, depressive) were assessed at three time points, spaced three months apart, using multigroup cross-lagged path analysis.ResultsAnxiety symptoms consistently predicted increases in depressive symptoms in European American adolescents. In contrast, for Vietnamese and Vietnamese American adolescents, the most consistent relation was with somatic complaints predicting increases in anxiety. Anxiety and depressive symptoms bidirectionally predicted each other among the Vietnamese and Vietnamese American adolescents.ConclusionsCultural group differences were evident in the temporal course of internalizing symptoms. The pattern of results have implications for culturally relevant intervention targets, during a developmental period of risk for internalizing disorders.
- Published
- 2019
28. Developing and evaluating a lay health worker delivered implementation intervention to decrease engagement disparities in behavioural parent training: a mixed methods study protocol.
- Author
-
Barnett, Miya, Miranda, Jeanne, Kia-Keating, Maryam, Saldana, Lisa, Landsverk, John, and Lau, Anna S
- Subjects
Humans ,Pilot Projects ,Parent-Child Relations ,Parenting ,Parents ,Behavior Therapy ,Qualitative Research ,Needs Assessment ,Hispanic Americans ,Female ,Male ,Healthcare Disparities ,Quality Improvement ,behavioural parent training ,implementation strategies ,lay health workers ,mental health disparities ,Clinical Sciences ,Public Health and Health Services ,Other Medical and Health Sciences - Abstract
IntroductionBehavioural parent training (BPT) programmes are effective in preventing and treating early-onset conduct problems and child maltreatment. Unfortunately, pervasive mental health service disparities continue to limit access to and engagement in these interventions. Furthermore, challenges with parental engagement can impede the successful implementation of evidence-based practices (EBPs) in community settings that serve low-income, ethnic minority families. Lay health workers (LHWs)-individuals without formal mental health training-represent an important workforce to increase engagement, as they are members of the communities they serve. However, the mobilisation of LHWs has not been well studied as an implementation strategy to extend the reach or effectiveness of EBPs in the USA. LHW-delivered implementation interventions that specifically support the engagement of Latinx parents in evidence-based BPT programmes have the potential to improve clinical and implementation outcomes.Methods and analysisA community-partnered approach will use the Quality Implementation Framework (QIF) to tailor and implement an LHW-delivered implementation intervention that aims to promote Latinx parent engagement in BPT programmes. Steps from the QIF will guide study activities to (1) conduct a mixed methods needs assessment to fit the implementation intervention to the local context, (2) adapt LHW-delivered implementation strategies to promote parent access to and engagement in Parent-Child Interaction Therapy and (3) conduct a hybrid effectiveness-implementation pilot trial to examine the feasibility, acceptability and preliminary effectiveness of the LHW implementation intervention at increasing engagement.Ethics and disseminationStudy procedures have been approved by the Institutional Review Board at the University of California, Santa Barbara. Results will be shared with the community-advisory group, at community-based meetings for other stakeholders involved in the pilot project, and submitted for publication in peer-reviewed journals.
- Published
- 2019
29. In-Session Caregiver Behaviors during Evidence-Based Intervention Delivery for Children with ASD in Community Mental Health Services
- Author
-
Guan, Karen, Lau, Anna S, Zhang, Aimee, Chlebowski, Colby, Haine-Schlagel, Rachel, and Brookman-Frazee, Lauren
- Subjects
Health Services and Systems ,Health Sciences ,Psychology ,Brain Disorders ,Autism ,Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities (IDD) ,Mental Health ,Clinical Research ,Comparative Effectiveness Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Pediatric ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,autism spectrum disorder ,caregiver engagement ,evidence-based treatment ,treatment engagement ,youth mental health - Abstract
An Individualized Mental Health Intervention for ASD, ("AIM HI"), is a collaborative, caregiver-mediated and child-directed intervention for reducing challenging behaviors in children with autism spectrum disorder developed for delivery in community mental health programs. Using observational data from AIM HI sessions, the present study characterized the occurrence of two types of in-session caregiver behaviors: expressed concerns (i.e., expressing concerns about treatment strategies; expressing difficulty using skills; expressing difficulty completing homework) and participation engagement (i.e., asking questions; participating in session activities; showing commitment to therapy). Further analyses examined cultural differences in caregiver behaviors and associations between caregiver behaviors and clinician adherence. Participants included 39 caregiver-clinician dyads enrolled in a community effectiveness trial of AIM HI. Video recordings from 107 sessions during the first two months of treatment were coded for in-session caregiver behaviors and clinician adherence. Results indicated that expressed concerns were observed in 47% of sessions. When controlling for household income, Latinx caregivers were rated lower for expressing concerns about treatment strategies and demonstrated lower participation engagement behaviors in session compared with non-Latinx White caregivers, suggesting that cultural factors may impact verbal engagement in sessions. Finally, expressing concerns about treatment strategies, expressing difficulty using skills, and participation engagement were positively associated with clinician adherence. Findings suggest that some expressed concerns and participation engagement behaviors may be indicators of positive caregiver engagement in the context of a collaborative intervention, and lower levels of such caregiver engagement may actually impede clinicians' delivery of intensive evidence-based intervention in routine care.
- Published
- 2019
30. Patterns of Child Mental Health Service Utilization Within a Multiple EBP System of Care
- Author
-
Lui, Joyce H. L., Brookman-Frazee, Lauren, Vázquez, Alejandro L., Cox, Julia R., Innes-Gomberg, Debbie, Taguchi, Kara, Pesanti, Keri, and Lau, Anna S.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Multiple Stakeholder Perspectives on School-Based Responses to Student Suicide Risk in a Diverse Public School District
- Author
-
Kodish, Tamar, Kim, Joanna J., Le, Kenny, Yu, Stephanie H., Bear, Laurel, and Lau, Anna S.
- Abstract
Schools across the US have implemented suicide prevention procedures to detect risk among students and facilitate linkage to mental health services. Yet, many students at risk for suicide do not access mental health treatment, and significant racial/ethnic disparities in service utilization persist. Quality improvement of suicide prevention procedures is needed to enhance care for suicidal youth. The present study examined perspectives of multiple stakeholders involved in school-based suicide prevention procedures through a qualitative design, in order to generate a set of quality improvement targets. Participants included school staff, students assessed for suicide risk at school, and their caregivers. Results indicated points of commonality and divergence across stakeholder groups. Students and parents described feelings of exclusion from decision-making processes, perceptions of rigid and disciplinary assessment procedures, traumatic experiences with crisis intervention, and practical barriers and facilitators to follow-up services. Staff perspectives highlighted positive regard for standardized protocols, efforts to reduce negative student experiences with assessment procedures, prioritization of student safety, and potential practical and attitudinal barriers and facilitators to follow-up care. Given these findings, a set of quality improvement targets is proposed and discussed, with a focus on family-centered interventions to promote engagement.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Resilience and Family Socialization Processes in Ethnic Minority Youth: Illuminating the Achievement-Health Paradox
- Author
-
Doan, Stacey N., Yu, Stephanie H., Wright, Blanche, Fung, Joey, Saleem, Farzana, and Lau, Anna S.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Mixed-method analysis of program leader perspectives on the sustainment of multiple child evidence-based practices in a system-driven implementation
- Author
-
Rodriguez, Adriana, Lau, Anna S, Wright, Blanche, Regan, Jennifer, and Brookman-Frazee, Lauren
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Psychology ,Clinical Research ,Health Services ,Mental Health ,Pediatric ,Pediatric Research Initiative ,Behavioral and Social Science ,8.1 Organisation and delivery of services ,Health and social care services research ,Good Health and Well Being ,Attitude of Health Personnel ,California ,Child ,Child Health Services ,Evidence-Based Practice ,Female ,Humans ,Organizations ,Program Evaluation ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Sustainment ,Evidence-based practice ,Program leader perspectives ,children's mental health services ,Mixed-method analysis ,children’s mental health services ,Information and Computing Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Health Policy & Services ,Biomedical and clinical sciences - Abstract
BACKGROUND:Understanding program leader perspectives on the sustainment of evidence-based practice (EBP) in community mental health settings is essential to improving implementation. To date, however, much of the literature has focused on direct service provider perspectives on EBP implementation. The aim of this mixed-method study was to identify factors associated with the sustainment of multiple EBPs within a system-driven implementation effort in children's mental health services. METHODS:Data were gathered from 186 leaders at 59 agencies within the Los Angeles County Department of Mental Health who were contracted to deliver one of six EBPs within the Prevention and Early Intervention initiative. RESULTS:Multi-level analyses of quantitative survey data (N = 186) revealed a greater probability of leader-reported EBP sustainment in large agencies and when leaders held more positive perceptions toward the EBP. Themes from semi-structured qualitative interviews conducted with a subset of survey participants (n = 47) expanded quantitative findings by providing detail on facilitating conditions in larger agencies and aspects of EBP fit that were perceived to lead to greater sustainment, including perceived fit with client needs, implementation requirements, aspects of the organizational workforce, availability of trainings, and overall therapist attitudes about EBPs. CONCLUSIONS:Findings inform EBP implementation efforts regarding decisions around organizational-level supports and promotion of EBP fit.
- Published
- 2018
34. Community Therapist Reports of Client Engagement Challenges During the Implementation of Multiple EBPs in Children’s Mental Health
- Author
-
Lau, Anna S, Gonzalez, Juan Carlos, Barnett, Miya L, Kim, Joanna J, Saifan, Dana, and Brookman-Frazee, Lauren
- Subjects
Allied Health and Rehabilitation Science ,Clinical and Health Psychology ,Health Services and Systems ,Health Sciences ,Psychology ,Clinical Research ,Pediatric Research Initiative ,Pediatric ,Mental Health ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being - Abstract
This study investigated therapist reports of client engagement challenges in delivering evidence-based practices (EBPs), within the context of a large-scale implementation of multiple practices in children's mental health services. Data were drawn from an online survey of 668 therapists (88% female, 35.0% Non-Hispanic White). The majority of therapists (75.4%) endorsed at least one client engagement challenge during their implementation of an EBP with an identified client over the previous two months. Two types of EBP client engagement challenges with distinct correlates but similar overall frequencies could be readily differentiated - Expressed Client Concerns and Limited Client Engagement in therapy activities. Limited Client Engagement were more commonly reported for clients with externalizing problems and by therapists with higher emotional exhaustion and negative perceptions of the specific EBP being delivered, whereas Hispanic/Latino therapists were less likely to report Limited Client Engagement. In contrast, Expressed Client Concerns were more commonly reported by therapists with positive general attitudes towards EBPs, and among therapists delivering a parent training EBP. Limited Client Engagement but not Expressed Concerns were linked with therapists' self-reported ability to carry out the EBP with the target client. Findings suggest that client engagement challenges are frequent during the delivery of EBPs, but may impact implementation differently based on whether they relate to challenges in engaging clients in therapy activities versus addressing concerns raised by clients.
- Published
- 2018
35. Comparing Agency Leader and Therapist Perspectives on Evidence-Based Practices: Associations with Individual and Organizational Factors in a Mental Health System-Driven Implementation Effort
- Author
-
Stadnick, Nicole A, Lau, Anna S, Barnett, Miya, Regan, Jennifer, Aarons, Gregory A, and Brookman-Frazee, Lauren
- Subjects
Health Services and Systems ,Health Sciences ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Research ,Health Services ,Mental Health ,Health and social care services research ,8.1 Organisation and delivery of services ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Attitude of Health Personnel ,Child ,Child Health Services ,Community Mental Health Services ,Evidence-Based Practice ,Female ,Humans ,Implementation Science ,Leadership ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Psychotherapy ,Evidence-based practice ,Children's mental health services ,Leader perspectives ,Therapist perspectives ,Organizational context ,Children’s mental health services ,Clinical Sciences ,Public Health and Health Services ,Psychology ,Psychiatry ,Health services and systems ,Applied and developmental psychology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
Agency leaders and therapists are essential stakeholders in implementation of evidence-based practices (EBPs) within publicly-funded mental health services. Little is known about how these stakeholders differ in their perceptions of specific EBPs and which individual and organizational factors differentially influence these perceptions. Within the context of a system-driven implementation of multiple EBPs, survey data from 160 leaders and 720 therapists were examined to assess differences in perceptions of six EBPs. Findings indicated that leaders and therapists have unique perspectives and preferences regarding EBPs that are shaped by distinct sociodemographic and professional characteristics and aspects of organizational functioning.
- Published
- 2018
36. Lay Health Worker Involvement in Evidence-Based Treatment Delivery: A Conceptual Model to Address Disparities in Care.
- Author
-
Barnett, Miya L, Lau, Anna S, and Miranda, Jeanne
- Subjects
Humans ,Mental Disorders ,Mental Health Services ,Developing Countries ,Delivery of Health Care ,Healthcare Disparities ,Evidence-Based Practice ,Community Health Workers ,evidence-based treatments ,lay health workers ,mental health disparities ,Clinical Research ,Health Services ,8.1 Organisation and delivery of services ,Health and social care services research ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Psychology ,Clinical Psychology - Abstract
Mobilizing lay health workers (LHWs) to deliver evidence-based treatments (EBTs) is a workforce strategy to address mental health disparities in underserved communities. LHWs can be leveraged to support access to EBTs in a variety of ways, from conducting outreach for EBTs delivered by professional providers to serving as the primary treatment providers. This critical review provides an overview of how LHW-supported or -delivered EBTs have been leveraged in low-, middle-, and high-income countries (HICs). We propose a conceptual model for LHWs to address drivers of service disparities, which relate to the overall supply of the EBTs provided and the demand for these treatments. The review provides illustrative case examples that demonstrate how LHWs have been leveraged globally and domestically to increase access to mental health services. It also discusses challenges and recommendations regarding implementing LHW-supported or -delivered EBTs.
- Published
- 2018
37. Predictors of Burnout Among Community Therapists in the Sustainment Phase of a System-Driven Implementation of Multiple Evidence-Based Practices in Children’s Mental Health
- Author
-
Kim, Joanna J, Brookman-Frazee, Lauren, Gellatly, Resham, Stadnick, Nicole, Barnett, Miya L, and Lau, Anna S
- Subjects
Health Services ,Mental Health ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Pediatric Research Initiative ,Health and social care services research ,8.1 Organisation and delivery of services ,Good Health and Well Being ,burnout ,community mental health ,EBP attitudes ,implementation and sustainment ,implementation & sustainment ,Psychology ,Other Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Clinical Psychology - Abstract
Burnout among community mental health (CMH) therapists has been associated with poorer therapist health, high agency turnover, poorer client outcomes, and compromised quality of care. Recent mandates to learn and implement multiple evidence-based practices (EBPs) within CMH settings are intended to improve the quality of community care, yet there is mixed evidence concerning the impacts on workforce burnout. The current study sought to identify correlates of therapist emotional exhaustion, a key aspect of burnout, during the sustainment phase of a system-driven implementation of multiple EBPs in children's mental health services. We hypothesized that high workload and unfavorable organizational climate would relate to therapist emotional exhaustion, but that positive experiences with EBPs adopted would relate to lower exhaustion. Although agency-level indices of organizational climate were unrelated to exhaustion, a multilevel model revealed that therapists' weekly work hours, caseload, and number of EBPs delivered were associated with increased emotional exhaustion. Additionally, activities associated with the EBP implementation efforts (e.g., hours spent in EBP-related activities, supervision or consultation, or outcome monitoring), were not associated with emotional exhaustion. Therapists' knowledge and confidence delivering EBPs and their positive perceptions of EBPs were protective against emotional exhaustion, but these perceptions did not buffer the risks associated with heavy workload. Findings point to implementation strategies to prevent burnout and associated turnover that compromise the returns on investments in EBP implementation.
- Published
- 2018
38. Mobilizing Community Health Workers to Address Mental Health Disparities for Underserved Populations: A Systematic Review.
- Author
-
Barnett, Miya L, Gonzalez, Araceli, Miranda, Jeanne, Chavira, Denise A, and Lau, Anna S
- Subjects
Humans ,Mental Health Services ,Health Policy ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Middle Aged ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Vulnerable Populations ,Community Health Services ,United States ,Female ,Male ,Healthcare Disparities ,Evidence-Based Practice ,Young Adult ,Community health workers ,Mental health disparities ,and over ,Preschool ,Clinical Research ,Health Services ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Prevention ,Mental Health ,8.1 Organisation and delivery of services ,Psychiatry ,Clinical Sciences ,Public Health and Health Services ,Psychology - Abstract
This systematic review evaluates efforts to date to involve community health workers (CHWs) in delivering evidence-based mental health interventions to underserved communities in the United States and in low- and middle-income countries. Forty-three articles (39 trials) were reviewed to characterize the background characteristics of CHW, their role in intervention delivery, the types of interventions they delivered, and the implementation supports they received. The majority of trials found that CHW-delivered interventions led to symptom reduction. Training CHWs to support the delivery of evidence-based practices may help to address mental health disparities. Areas for future research as well as clinical and policy implications are discussed.
- Published
- 2018
39. Using Survival Analysis to Understand Patterns of Sustainment within a System-Driven Implementation of Multiple Evidence-Based Practices for Children’s Mental Health Services
- Author
-
Brookman-Frazee, Lauren, Zhan, Chanel, Stadnick, Nicole, Sommerfeld, David, Roesch, Scott, Aarons, Gregory A, Innes-Gomberg, Debbie, Bando, Lillian, and Lau, Anna S
- Subjects
Health Services and Systems ,Health Sciences ,Pediatric ,Mental Health ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Prevention ,Violence Research ,Pediatric Research Initiative ,Clinical Research ,Health Services ,Health and social care services research ,8.1 Organisation and delivery of services ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,evidence-based practices ,sustainment ,survival analysis ,administrative claims data ,children's mental health services ,children’s mental health services ,Public Health and Health Services ,Health services and systems ,Public health - Abstract
Evidence-based practice (EBP) implementation requires substantial resources in workforce training; yet, failure to achieve long-term sustainment can result in poor return on investment. There is limited research on EBP sustainment in mental health services long after implementation. This study examined therapists' continued vs. discontinued practice delivery based on administrative claims for reimbursement for six EBPs [Cognitive Behavioral Interventions for Trauma in Schools (CBITS), Child-Parent Psychotherapy, Managing and Adapting Practices (MAP), Seeking Safety (SS), Trauma-Focused Cognitive Behavior Therapy (TF-CBT), and Positive Parenting Program] adopted in a system-driven implementation effort in public mental health services for children. Our goal was to identify agency and therapist factors associated with a sustained EBP delivery. Survival analysis (i.e., Kaplan-Meier survival functions, log-rank tests, and Cox regressions) was used to analyze 19 fiscal quarters (i.e., approximately 57 months) of claims data from the Prevention and Early Intervention Transformation within the Los Angeles County Department of Mental Health. These data comprised 2,322,389 claims made by 6,873 therapists across 88 agencies. Survival time was represented by the time elapsed from therapists' first to final claims for each practice and for any of the six EBPs. Results indicate that therapists continued to deliver at least one EBP for a mean survival time of 21.73 months (median = 18.70). When compared to a survival curve of the five other EBPs, CBITS, SS, and TP demonstrated a higher risk of delivery discontinuation, whereas MAP and TF-CBT demonstrated a lower risk of delivery discontinuation. A multivariate Cox regression model revealed that agency (centralization and service setting) and therapist (demographics, discipline, and case-mix characteristics) characteristics were significantly associated with risk of delivery discontinuation for any of the six EBPs. This study illustrates a novel application of survival analysis to administrative claims data in system-driven implementation of multiple EBPs. Findings reveal variability in the long-term continuation of therapist-level delivery of EBPs and highlight the importance of both agency and workforce characteristics in the sustained delivery of EBPs. Findings direct the field to potential targets of sustainment interventions (e.g., strategic assignment of therapists to EBP training and strategic selection of EBPs by agencies).
- Published
- 2018
40. Correction to: Scaling-up Child and Youth Mental Health Services: Assessing Coverage of a County-Wide Prevention and Early Intervention Initiative During One Fiscal Year
- Author
-
Hooley, Cole, Salvo, Deborah, Brown, Derek S., Brookman-Frazee, Lauren, Lau, Anna S., Brownson, Ross C., Fowler, Patrick J., Innes-Gomberg, Debbie, and Proctor, Enola K.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Interpersonal Psychotherapy—Adolescent Skills Training With Youth From Asian American and Immigrant Families: Cultural Considerations and Intervention Process
- Author
-
Kodish, Tamar, Weiss, Bahr, Duong, Jacqueline, Rodriguez, Adriana, Anderson, Gabrielle, Nguyen, Hannah, Olaya, Cynthia, and Lau, Anna S.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Agency responses to a system-driven implementation of multiple evidence-based practices in children’s mental health services
- Author
-
Regan, Jennifer, Lau, Anna S, Barnett, Miya, Stadnick, Nicole, Hamilton, Alison, Pesanti, Keri, Bando, Lillian, and Brookman-Frazee, Lauren
- Subjects
Clinical Research ,Health Services ,Comparative Effectiveness Research ,Mental Health ,Pediatric ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,California ,Child ,Child Health Services ,Child ,Preschool ,Evidence-Based Practice ,Female ,Humans ,Infant ,Male ,Mental Health Services ,Neurodevelopmental Disorders ,Program Evaluation ,Qualitative Research ,Children's Mental health ,Fiscally-driven implementation ,Qualitative methods ,Implementation strategies ,Children’s Mental health ,Library and Information Studies ,Nursing ,Public Health and Health Services ,Health Policy & Services - Abstract
BackgroundLarge mental health systems are increasingly using fiscal policies to encourage the implementation of multiple evidence-based practices (EBPs). Although many implementation strategies have been identified, little is known about the types and impacts of strategies that are used by organizations within implementation as usual. This study examined organizational-level responses to a fiscally-driven, rapid, and large scale EBP implementation in children's mental health within the Los Angeles County Department of Mental Health.MethodsQualitative methods using the principles of grounded theory were used to characterize the responses of 83 community-based agencies to the implementation effort using documentation from site visits conducted 2 years post reform.ResultsFindings indicated that agencies perceived the rapid system-driven implementation to have both positive and negative organizational impacts. Identified challenges were primarily related to system implementation requirements rather than to characteristics of specific EBPs. Agencies employed a variety of implementation strategies in response to the system-driven implementation, with agency size associated with implementation strategies used. Moderate- and large-sized agencies were more likely than small agencies to have employed systematic strategies at multiple levels (i.e., organization, therapist, client) to support implementation.ConclusionsThese findings are among the first to characterize organizational variability in response to system-driven implementation and suggest ways that implementation interventions might be tailored by organizational characteristics.
- Published
- 2017
43. Managing In-Session “Surprises:” Provider Responses to Emergent Life Events during Evidence-Based Treatment Implementation
- Author
-
Guan, Karen, Levy, Michelle C, Kim, Rachel E, Brown, Todd E, Reding, Michael EJ, Rith-Najarian, Leslie, Sun, Michael, Lau, Anna S, and Chorpita, Bruce F
- Subjects
Clinical Research ,Community Health Services ,Evidence-Based Practice ,Humans ,Life Change Events ,Psychotherapy ,Reproducibility of Results ,Stress ,Psychological ,United States ,Emergent life events ,Dissemination and implementation ,Evidence-based treatment ,Community settings ,Therapy providers ,Clinical Sciences ,Public Health and Health Services ,Psychology ,Psychiatry - Abstract
This study aimed to: (1) pilot a psychotherapy coding system for provider responses to emergent life events (ELEs; unexpected events that have a significant negative impact on the client), (2) examine the impact of ELEs on evidence-based treatment (EBT) delivery in community settings. Raters coded 30 randomly-sampled EBT session recordings with and without reported ELEs. Inter-rater reliability and validity for the system were generally high. When an ELE occurred, providers were significantly less likely to deliver the EBT, and when they did, they rarely linked the EBT to the event. Findings highlight the potential for ELEs to disrupt EBT implementation.
- Published
- 2017
44. Outside the Clinic Door: How Neighborhood Sociodemographic Disadvantage is Associated with Community Therapist Secondary Traumatic Stress and Emotional Exhaustion
- Author
-
Kuckertz, Mary, primary, Lind, Teresa, additional, Lau, Anna S., additional, Motamedi, Mojdeh, additional, Wright, Blanche, additional, Le, Kenny, additional, and Brookman-Frazee, Lauren, additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Effects of Family Obligation Values and Autonomy Support on Internalizing Symptoms of Vietnamese-American and European-American Adolescents
- Author
-
Tsai, Kim M., Nguyen, Hannah, Weiss, Bahr, Ngo, Victoria K., and Lau, Anna S.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Research Community Collaboration in Observational Implementation Research: Complementary Motivations and Concerns in Engaging in the Study of Implementation as Usual
- Author
-
Lau, Anna S., Rodriguez, Adriana, Bando, Lillian, Innes-Gomberg, Debbie, and Brookman-Frazee, Lauren
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Ethnicity Moderates the Outcomes of Self-Enhancement and Self-Improvement Themes in Expressive Writing
- Author
-
Tsai, William, Lau, Anna S, Niles, Andrea N, Coello, Jordan, Lieberman, Matthew D, Ko, Ahra C, Hur, Christopher, and Stanton, Annette L
- Subjects
Clinical and Health Psychology ,Social and Personality Psychology ,Psychology ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental health ,Adult ,Asian ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Self-Assessment ,Stress ,Psychological ,United States ,White People ,Writing ,Young Adult ,expressive writing ,culture ,self-enhancement ,self-improvement ,Cultural Studies ,General Psychology & Cognitive Sciences ,Human resources and industrial relations ,Applied and developmental psychology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
The current study examined whether writing content related to self-enhancing (viz., downward social comparison and situational attributions) and self-improving (viz., upward social comparison and persistence) motivations were differentially related to expressive writing outcomes among 17 Asian American and 17 European American participants. Content analysis of the essays revealed no significant cultural group differences in the likelihood of engaging in self-enhancing versus self-improving reflections on negative personal experiences. However, cultural group differences were apparent in the relation between self-motivation processes and changes in anxiety and depressive symptoms at 3-month follow-up. Among European Americans, writing that reflected downward social comparison predicted positive outcomes, whereas persistence writing themes were related to poorer outcomes. For Asian Americans, writing about persistence was related to positive outcomes, whereas downward social comparison and situational attributions predicted poorer outcomes. Findings provide evidence suggesting culturally distinct mechanisms for the effects of expressive disclosure. (PsycINFO Database Record
- Published
- 2015
48. Genetic and Environmental Predictors of Alcohol Use in Asian American Young Adults.
- Author
-
Bujarski, Spencer, Lau, Anna S, Lee, Steve S, and Ray, Lara A
- Subjects
Biological Psychology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Health Sciences ,Psychology ,Substance Misuse ,Brain Disorders ,Pediatric ,Alcoholism ,Alcohol Use and Health ,Underage Drinking ,Genetics ,Clinical Research ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,Aetiology ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Acculturation ,Adult ,Alcohol Dehydrogenase ,Alcohol Drinking ,Aldehyde Dehydrogenase ,Asian ,Environment ,Female ,Genotype ,Humans ,Male ,Risk Factors ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Young Adult ,Public Health and Health Services ,Substance Abuse ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
ObjectiveAmong Asian American young adults, variations in alcohol-metabolizing genes (i.e., aldehyde dehydrogenase [ALDH2] and alcohol dehydrogenase [ADH1B]) are protective, whereas Korean ethnicity, family history of alcohol problems (FH), and acculturation represent risk factors for alcohol misuse. This study aims to integrate these genetic and environmental factors in a sample of Asian Americans expressing a wide range of alcohol use behaviors and problems.MethodParticipants were 97 Asian American young adults (42% female) recruited as heavy and light drinkers (n = 49 and 48, respectively). Participants completed the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test, Timeline Followback, Vancouver Acculturation Index, and Family Tree Questionnaire. All participants provided buccal cell samples for DNA analysis.ResultsFamily history-positive (FH+) subjects reported greater alcohol use than family history-negative (FH-) subjects. A FH × ALDH2 interaction was observed such that FH- subjects demonstrated no ALDH2 effect, yet in FH+ subjects, the ALDH2*2 genotype was associated with increased alcohol use. A significant main effect of acculturation was also moderated by FH such that the positive association between acculturation and alcohol use was greater among FH+ subjects and, in particular, among FH+ men.ConclusionsAlthough preliminary, these results suggest that the potential protective effects conferred by ALDH2 and ADH1B are moderated by FH, such that a positive FH appeared to abolish the protective effect of these genes. Further, acculturation was associated with greater alcohol use in FH+ subjects only. If replicated in larger samples, these data suggest that alcohol-metabolism genes may not be protective in the context of high environmental risk.
- Published
- 2015
49. Outer-context determinants in the sustainment phase of a reimbursement-driven implementation of evidence-based practices in children’s mental health services
- Author
-
Lui, Joyce H. L., Brookman-Frazee, Lauren, Lind, Teresa, Le, Kenny, Roesch, Scott, Aarons, Gregory A., Innes-Gomberg, Debbie, Pesanti, Keri, and Lau, Anna S.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Cultural variation in temporal associations among somatic complaints, anxiety, and depressive symptoms in adolescence
- Author
-
Kim, Jacqueline H.J., Tsai, William, Kodish, Tamar, Trung, Lam T., Lau, Anna S., and Weiss, Bahr
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.