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ESSENCE: An Implementation Research Program to Scale Up Depression Care in Rural Communities.

Authors :
Tugnawat, Deepak
Singh, Abhishek
Anand, Aditya
Bondre, Ameya
Chandke, Dinesh
Dhurve, Pooja
Joshi, Udita
Khan, Azaz
Muke, Shital
Negi, Babita
Nikhare, Kalyani
Rathore, Dharmendra
Ramaswamy, Rohit
Haney, Juliana Restivo
Sen, Yogendra
Sharma, Kamlesh
Shrivastava, Ritu
Verma, Narendra
Vishwakarma, Ram
Vishwakarma, Deepali
Source :
Psychiatric Services; Feb2024, Vol. 75 Issue 2, p167-177, 11p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Task sharing may involve training nonspecialist health workers (NSHWs) to deliver brief mental health interventions. This approach is promising for reducing the global mental health treatment gap. However, capacity is limited for training large cadres of frontline workers in low- and middle-income countries, hindering uptake of these interventions at scale. The ESSENCE (enabling translation of science to service to enhance depression care) project in Madhya Pradesh, India, aims to address these challenges through two sequential randomized controlled trials. First, a training trial will evaluate the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of digital training, compared with conventional face-to-face training, in achieving clinical competency of NSHWs in delivering an intervention for depression. This initial trial will be followed by an implementation trial aimed at evaluating the effectiveness of a remote enhanced implementation support, compared with routine implementation support, in addressing barriers to delivery of depression care in primary care facilities. This project involved developing and pilot testing a scalable smartphone-based program for training NSHWs to deliver a brief psychological intervention for depression screening. This initial research guided a randomized trial of a digital training approach with NSHWs to evaluate the effectiveness of this approach. This trial will be followed by a cluster-randomized trial to evaluate the effectiveness of remote implementation support in ensuring efficient delivery of depression care in primary care facilities. Findings from these trials may inform sustainable training and implementation support models to integrate depression care into primary care for scale-up in resource-constrained settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10752730
Volume :
75
Issue :
2
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Psychiatric Services
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
175162405
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1176/appi.ps.202100223