Implementation of peer specialist services in VA primary care: a cluster randomized trial on the impact of external facilitation

Abstract Background Over 1100 veterans work in the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) as peer specialists (PSs)—those with formal training who support other veterans with similar diagnoses. A White House Executive Action mandated the pilot reassignment of VHA PSs from their usual placement in ment...

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Main Authors: Matthew Chinman, Richard Goldberg, Karin Daniels, Anjana Muralidharan, Jeffrey Smith, Sharon McCarthy, Deborah Medoff, Amanda Peeples, Lorrianne Kuykendall, Natalie Vineyard, Lan Li
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-06-01
Series:Implementation Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s13012-021-01130-2
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language English
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author Matthew Chinman
Richard Goldberg
Karin Daniels
Anjana Muralidharan
Jeffrey Smith
Sharon McCarthy
Deborah Medoff
Amanda Peeples
Lorrianne Kuykendall
Natalie Vineyard
Lan Li
spellingShingle Matthew Chinman
Richard Goldberg
Karin Daniels
Anjana Muralidharan
Jeffrey Smith
Sharon McCarthy
Deborah Medoff
Amanda Peeples
Lorrianne Kuykendall
Natalie Vineyard
Lan Li
Implementation of peer specialist services in VA primary care: a cluster randomized trial on the impact of external facilitation
Implementation Science
Peer specialist
Implementation
Facilitation
Primary care
author_facet Matthew Chinman
Richard Goldberg
Karin Daniels
Anjana Muralidharan
Jeffrey Smith
Sharon McCarthy
Deborah Medoff
Amanda Peeples
Lorrianne Kuykendall
Natalie Vineyard
Lan Li
author_sort Matthew Chinman
title Implementation of peer specialist services in VA primary care: a cluster randomized trial on the impact of external facilitation
title_short Implementation of peer specialist services in VA primary care: a cluster randomized trial on the impact of external facilitation
title_full Implementation of peer specialist services in VA primary care: a cluster randomized trial on the impact of external facilitation
title_fullStr Implementation of peer specialist services in VA primary care: a cluster randomized trial on the impact of external facilitation
title_full_unstemmed Implementation of peer specialist services in VA primary care: a cluster randomized trial on the impact of external facilitation
title_sort implementation of peer specialist services in va primary care: a cluster randomized trial on the impact of external facilitation
publisher BMC
series Implementation Science
issn 1748-5908
publishDate 2021-06-01
description Abstract Background Over 1100 veterans work in the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) as peer specialists (PSs)—those with formal training who support other veterans with similar diagnoses. A White House Executive Action mandated the pilot reassignment of VHA PSs from their usual placement in mental health to 25 primary care Patient Aligned Care Teams (PACTs) in order to broaden the provision of wellness services that can address many chronic illnesses. An evaluation of this initiative was undertaken to assess the impact of outside assistance on the deployment of PSs in PACTs, as implementation support is often needed to prevent challenges commonly experienced when first deploying PSs in new settings. Methods This study was a cluster-randomized hybrid II effectiveness-implementation trial to test the impact of minimal implementation support vs. facilitated implementation on the deployment of VHA PSs in PACT over 2 years. Twenty-five Veterans Affairs Medical Centers (VAMCs) were recruited to reassign mental health PSs to provide wellness-oriented care in PACT. Sites in three successive cohorts (n = 7, 10, 8) over 6-month blocks were matched and randomized to each study condition. In facilitated implementation, an outside expert worked with site stakeholders through a site visit and regular calls, and provided performance data to guide the planning and address challenges. Minimal implementation sites received a webinar and access to the VHA Office of Mental Health Services work group. The two conditions were compared on PS workload data and veteran measures of activation, satisfaction, and functioning. Qualitative interviews collected information on perceived usefulness of the PS services. Results In the first year, sites that received facilitation had higher numbers of unique veterans served and a higher number of PS visits, although the groups did not differ after the second year. Also, sites receiving external facilitation started delivering PS services more quickly than minimal support sites. All sites in the external facilitation condition continued in the pilot into the second year, whereas two of the sites in the minimal assistance condition dropped out after the first year. There were no differences between groups on veterans’ outcomes—activation, satisfaction, and functioning. Most veterans were very positive about the help they received as evidenced in the qualitative interviews. Discussion These findings demonstrate that external facilitation can be effective in supporting the implementation of PSs in primary care settings. The lack of significant differences across conditions after the second year highlights the positive outcomes associated with active facilitation, while also raising the important question of whether longer-term success may require some level of ongoing facilitation and implementation support. Trial registration This project is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov with number NCT02732600 (URL: https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02732600 ).
topic Peer specialist
Implementation
Facilitation
Primary care
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s13012-021-01130-2
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spelling doaj-12c9d466d3bb481484433913558116c32021-06-13T11:10:31ZengBMCImplementation Science1748-59082021-06-0116111310.1186/s13012-021-01130-2Implementation of peer specialist services in VA primary care: a cluster randomized trial on the impact of external facilitationMatthew Chinman0Richard Goldberg1Karin Daniels2Anjana Muralidharan3Jeffrey Smith4Sharon McCarthy5Deborah Medoff6Amanda Peeples7Lorrianne Kuykendall8Natalie Vineyard9Lan Li10VISN 4 Mental Illness Research, Education and Clinical Center, VA PittsburghVISN 5 Mental Illness Research, Education and Clinical Center (MIRECC)Center for Health Equity Research and Promotion, VA PittsburghVISN 5 Mental Illness Research, Education and Clinical Center (MIRECC)VA Behavioral Health Quality Enhancement Research Initiative (QUERI), Central Arkansas Veterans Healthcare SystemVISN 4 Mental Illness Research, Education and Clinical Center, VA PittsburghVISN 5 Mental Illness Research, Education and Clinical Center (MIRECC)VISN 5 Mental Illness Research, Education and Clinical Center (MIRECC)VISN 5 Mental Illness Research, Education and Clinical Center (MIRECC)VISN 5 Mental Illness Research, Education and Clinical Center (MIRECC)VISN 5 Mental Illness Research, Education and Clinical Center (MIRECC)Abstract Background Over 1100 veterans work in the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) as peer specialists (PSs)—those with formal training who support other veterans with similar diagnoses. A White House Executive Action mandated the pilot reassignment of VHA PSs from their usual placement in mental health to 25 primary care Patient Aligned Care Teams (PACTs) in order to broaden the provision of wellness services that can address many chronic illnesses. An evaluation of this initiative was undertaken to assess the impact of outside assistance on the deployment of PSs in PACTs, as implementation support is often needed to prevent challenges commonly experienced when first deploying PSs in new settings. Methods This study was a cluster-randomized hybrid II effectiveness-implementation trial to test the impact of minimal implementation support vs. facilitated implementation on the deployment of VHA PSs in PACT over 2 years. Twenty-five Veterans Affairs Medical Centers (VAMCs) were recruited to reassign mental health PSs to provide wellness-oriented care in PACT. Sites in three successive cohorts (n = 7, 10, 8) over 6-month blocks were matched and randomized to each study condition. In facilitated implementation, an outside expert worked with site stakeholders through a site visit and regular calls, and provided performance data to guide the planning and address challenges. Minimal implementation sites received a webinar and access to the VHA Office of Mental Health Services work group. The two conditions were compared on PS workload data and veteran measures of activation, satisfaction, and functioning. Qualitative interviews collected information on perceived usefulness of the PS services. Results In the first year, sites that received facilitation had higher numbers of unique veterans served and a higher number of PS visits, although the groups did not differ after the second year. Also, sites receiving external facilitation started delivering PS services more quickly than minimal support sites. All sites in the external facilitation condition continued in the pilot into the second year, whereas two of the sites in the minimal assistance condition dropped out after the first year. There were no differences between groups on veterans’ outcomes—activation, satisfaction, and functioning. Most veterans were very positive about the help they received as evidenced in the qualitative interviews. Discussion These findings demonstrate that external facilitation can be effective in supporting the implementation of PSs in primary care settings. The lack of significant differences across conditions after the second year highlights the positive outcomes associated with active facilitation, while also raising the important question of whether longer-term success may require some level of ongoing facilitation and implementation support. Trial registration This project is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov with number NCT02732600 (URL: https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02732600 ).https://doi.org/10.1186/s13012-021-01130-2Peer specialistImplementationFacilitationPrimary care