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Jill Johnson Illinois PBIS Network Sharon Stephan, Ph.D. University of Maryland School of Medicine PBIS Annual Meeting October 10 th, 2013 Integrating.

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Presentation on theme: "Jill Johnson Illinois PBIS Network Sharon Stephan, Ph.D. University of Maryland School of Medicine PBIS Annual Meeting October 10 th, 2013 Integrating."— Presentation transcript:

1 Jill Johnson Illinois PBIS Network Sharon Stephan, Ph.D. University of Maryland School of Medicine PBIS Annual Meeting October 10 th, 2013 Integrating School Mental Health and PBIS: Selecting Evidence-based Practices

2 Objectives 1. Describe at least two strategies for integrating PBIS and school mental health. 2. Name at least one evidence-based mental health practice at each level of the public health triangle. 3. Describe the difference between evidence-based manualized and modularized mental health interventions.

3 Center for School Mental Health MISSION To strengthen the policies and programs in school mental health to improve learning and promote success for America’s youth Established in 1995. Federal funding from the Health Resources and services Administration. Focus on advancing school mental health policy, research, practice, and training. Shared family-schools-community agenda. Co-Directors: Sharon Stephan, Ph.D. & Nancy Lever, Ph.D. http://csmh.umaryland.eduhttp://csmh.umaryland.edu, (410) 706-0980

4 Our Team

5 SCHOOL MENTAL HEALTH – A DEFINITION

6 A partnership between schools and community health organizations… Guided by youth and families.

7 Builds on existing school programs, services, and strategies.

8 Focuses on all students… …in both general and special education

9 Includes a full array of programs, services, and strategies

10 Definition of school mental health Involves partnership between schools and community health/mental health organizations, as guided by families and youth Builds on existing school programs, services, and strategies Focuses on all students, both general and special education Involves a full array of programs, services, and strategies- mental health education and promotion through intensive intervention (Weist & Paternite, 2006)

11 Who provides mental health services in schools?

12 Research Supported Interventions Involve…. Strong training Fidelity monitoring Ongoing technical assistance and coaching Administrative support Incentives Intangibles

13 Practice in the Trenches? Involves NONE of these supports

14 What’s happening on the “front lines”?

15 “Some Good Stuff” Increasing emphasis on: – Evidence-based (research-supported) Practice (EBP) – Outcomes – Consideration of cultural context in development, implementation and evaluation of EBP – Recognition of the importance of meaningfully partnering with families – Increased emphasis on workforce development of mental health providers and educators

16 “Some Not-So-Good Stuff” Limited control/accountability of providers and services provided Gaps in training, particularly related to schools and evidence- based practice “C.O.W. Therapy” – Crisis of the Week

17 Challenges selecting evidence- based MH practices School/clinician has not: – assessed specific needs of school/students – identified target outcomes – defined “success” (of interventions) – identified a way to measure intervention fidelity MH interventions are often not designed for complex issues

18 Activity Think of a current intervention that your district/school/organization uses to address student needs. Answer the following questions regarding said intervention: Selection of the intervention allows for clear and measureable outcomesYESNO The intervention provides for generalization YESNO The implementation of the EBP allows for the assessment of implementation fidelity YES NO

19 Consumer Guide to Selecting Evidenced Based Mental Health Services Main Components Assessment Interventions Selection Intervention Progress Monitoring

20 Assessment

21 Intervention Selection

22 Intervention Progress Monitoring

23 Potential Uses of the Tool To determine needs of a school/agency/community To determine what EBP may be most effective to address needs To guide the implementation of an EBP To reflect on current EBP – Celebrate that components are in place – Action plan on how to include necessary components

24 Who Can Utilize the Tool Building or District-level teams Community-level teams Joint building or district-community teams Practitioners

25 Illinois Example Reflecting on Current Evidence-based Practices District Leadership Team had a concern that interventions utilized by staff were not culturally relevant nor appropriate to address needs – Wanted a non-confrontation way for social workers to reflect on their practices, lack there-of Tool was used at a School Social Work meeting within the district

26 School Social Work Meeting Results Mean = 6

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29 District Leader Thoughts Partnership between school and community providers is lacking Implementation fidelity not addressed Progress monitoring interventions not done systematically Self-assessment by social workers may not be accurate – Budget issues – Defensive Example: They scored themselves 100% on culturally relevant interventions: however, students on intervention were all African- American and at-risk for change of placement

30 District Action Steps Work towards school-community partnership on Strategic Plan/District Leadership Team – Short-term goal: Quarterly, one community partner invited to school social work meeting Long-term goal: add community partners back on DLT Long-term goal: each building collaborate with one community partner; add to tiered team Add implementation fidelity and evaluation tools to practice – Short term goal: Strickland tools Offer professional development/support for social workers – Short-term goal: Use Consumer Guide, BAT, ISSET to drive school social work meetings monthly

31 CURRENT TRENDS AND FUTURE DIRECTIONS IN SMH

32 Four Themes in Quality Services Systematic Quality Assessment and Improvement Family Engagement and Empowerment Modular, Evidence-Based Skill Training Implementation Support

33 Quality Assessment and Improvement (QAI) Principles Emphasize access Tailor to local needs and strengths Emphasize quality and empirical support Active involvement of diverse stakeholders Full continuum from promotion to treatment Committed and energetic staff Developmental and cultural competence Coordinated in the school and connected in the community

34 Examples of QAI tools School Mental Health Quality Assessment Questionnaire (SMH-QAQ) –https://csmh.umaryland.eduhttps://csmh.umaryland.edu Mental Health Planning and Assessment Template (MHPET) –www.nasbhc.orgwww.nasbhc.org

35 Effectively Partnering with Families Early focus on engagement, e.g., through candid discussions about past experiences Emphasize empowerment and the potential for improvement Provide pragmatic support Emphasize mutual collaboration See McKay, Hoagwood

36 Results of using these elements

37 Focus on Evidence-Based Practice – “Manualized” and “Modularized” Intervention/Indicated: Cognitive Behavioral Intervention for Trauma in Schools, Coping Cat, Trauma Focused CBT, Interpersonal Therapy for Adolescents (IPT-A) Prevention/Selected: Coping Power, FRIENDS for Youth/Teens, The Incredible Years, Second Step, SEFEL and DECA Strategies and Tools, Strengthening Families Coping Resources Workshops Promotion/Universal: Good Behavior Game, PATHS to PAX, Positive Behavior Interventions and Support, Social and Emotional Foundations of Early Learning (SEFEL), Olweus Bullying Prevention, Toward No Tobacco Use

38 Modularized Interventions – aka “Common Elements” approaches Chorpita, B.F., & Daleiden, E.L. (2007). 2007 Biennial Report: Effective Psychosocial Intervention for Youth with Behavioral and Emotional Needs. Child and Mental Health Division, Hawaii Department of Health – (Reviews most important treatment foci for Anxiety, Attention Problems, Autism, Depression, Disruptive Behavior Disorders, Substance Use, and Traumatic Stress)

39 Origins of the “Common Elements” Approach Step 1: Emphasis on evidenced-based treatments Step 2: Development of treatment manuals Step 3: Information overload: Too many treatment manuals to learn and manuals change as new knowledge is gained 39

40 How will I ever master all these treatment manuals ??? Forget it! No one really does this anyway!

41 Treatment Family Treatment Protocols Practice Elements Illustration of Common Elements terminology From Chorpita & Marder, 2009. UCLA Common Elements Summer Social Work Workshop

42 PracticeWise Resources www.practicewise.com Subscription-based resources: – PracticeWise Evidence-Based Services Database (PWEBS) – PracticeWise Practitioner Guides – PracticeWise Clinical Dashboards – Modular Approach to Therapy for Children (MATCH)

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46 Example of printable PDF describing practice element: Audience Goals of this practice element Steps for using this practice element

47 Clinical Dashboards Microsoft Excel based monitoring tool – Tracks achievement of treatment goals or other progress measures on a weekly/session basis – Documents which practice elements were used when Dashboard can be customized: – Display up to 5 progress measures; – Write-in additional practice elements Potential uses: – Documenting session activities – Tracking client progress – Clinical supervision

48 Progress Measures Document which practice element was used when 48

49 Implementation Support Focus on “indigenous” school resources Moving beyond “Train and Hope” Focus on: – Interactive and lively teaching – Off and on-site coaching, performance assessment and feedback, emotional and administrative support – Peer to peer support – User friendliness see Dean Fixsen, Karen Blasé, National Implementation Research Network (NIRN)

50 SCHOOL MENTAL HEALTH RESOURCES…

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52 National Community of Practice on School Behavioral Health www.sharedwork.org www.sharedwork.org CSMH and IDEA Partnership 12 practice groups: – Connecting School Mental Health and Positive Behavior Supports – Connecting School Mental Health with Juvenile Justice and Dropout Prevention – Education: An Essential Component of Systems of Care – Families in Partnership with Schools and Communities – Improving School Mental Health for Youth with Disabilities – Learning the Language: Promoting Effective Ways for interdisciplinary Collaboration – Psychiatry and Schools – Quality and Evidence-Based Practice – School Mental Health and Culturally Diverse Youth – School Mental Health for Military Families – Social, Emotional, and Mental Health in Schools – Youth Involvement and Leadership

53 CSMH Annual Conference on Advancing School Mental Health 1996 Baltimore 1997 New Orleans 1998 Virginia Beach 1999 Denver 2000 Atlanta 2002 Philadelphia 2003 Portland, OR 2004 Dallas* * Launch of National Community of Practice on School Behavioral Health 2005 Cleveland 2006 Baltimore 2007 Orlando 2008 Phoenix 2009 Minneapolis 2010 Albuquerque 2011 Charleston, SC 2012 Salt Lake City, UT Mark your calendars for Oct 3-5, 2013 in Crystal City- Arlington, Virginia

54 JOURNALS School Mental Health A Multidisciplinary Research and Practice Journal Editor-in-Chief: Steven W. Evans International efforts in SMH research, practice, policy and training Editor-in-Chief: Mark Weist Deputy Editor: Sharon Stephan (Editor- in-Chief, as of January 2014) Advances in School Mental Health Promotion

55 Nicole Evangelista, Ph.D. nevangel@psych.umaryland.edu Center for School Mental Health University of Maryland, Baltimore School of Medicine Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry 737 W. Lombard St. 4th floor Baltimore, Maryland 21201 (http://csmh.umaryland.eduhttp://csmh.umaryland.edu Email: csmh@psych.umaryland.educsmh@psych.umaryland.edu Phone: (410) 706-0980 Sharon Stephan, Ph.D. sstephan@psych.umaryland.edu 410-706-0941


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