International Journal of Mental Health Systems (Apr 2019)

Advancing the state-level tracking of evidence-based practices: a case study

  • Sarah Cusworth Walker,
  • Georganna Sedlar,
  • Lucy Berliner,
  • Felix I. Rodriguez,
  • Paul A. Davis,
  • Savannah Johnson,
  • Jessica Leith

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13033-019-0280-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Background Despite a sustained focus by policymakers and researchers on improving the standard of clinical care in public mental health services, the use of evidence-based practice remains low. Among other challenges, this reflects the difficulty of translating clinical research into useable policy that can be feasibly funded and monitored by state or large healthcare systems. Case presentation In this paper we present a case study of Washington State’s strategy for monitoring the use of clinical elements at the session level for all Medicaid-funded children’s mental health services. The implementation of this strategy reflects policy actions to promote effective practice while also actively influencing multiple other levels of the implementation ecology. The approach is informed by the Policy Ecology Framework, the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research, the evidence-based policymaking literature, and common ontology and clinical elements models. Conclusions We found the strategy developed in Washington State to be a feasible method of collecting session level information about the use of effective clinical mental health practices. In addition, the approach appears to be having influence on multiple layers of the implementation ecology that could be explored through further study.

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