Process evaluation of the Getting it Right study and acceptability and feasibility of screening for depression with the aPHQ-9

Abstract Background The Getting it Right study determined the validity, sensitivity, specificity and acceptability of the culturally adapted 9-item Patient Health Questionnaire (aPHQ-9) as a screening tool for depression in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander (hereafter referred to as Indigenous) ...

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Main Authors: Sara Farnbach, Graham Gee, Anne-Marie Eades, John Robert Evans, Jamie Fernando, Belinda Hammond, Matty Simms, Karrina DeMasi, Nick Glozier, Alex Brown, Maree L. Hackett, on behalf of the Getting it Right Investigators
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-09-01
Series:BMC Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-019-7569-4
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spelling doaj-37c17ee0266042e58dcb30514ba83b782020-11-25T03:02:52ZengBMCBMC Public Health1471-24582019-09-011911710.1186/s12889-019-7569-4Process evaluation of the Getting it Right study and acceptability and feasibility of screening for depression with the aPHQ-9Sara Farnbach0Graham Gee1Anne-Marie Eades2John Robert Evans3Jamie Fernando4Belinda Hammond5Matty Simms6Karrina DeMasi7Nick Glozier8Alex Brown9Maree L. Hackett10on behalf of the Getting it Right InvestigatorsThe George Institute for Global Health, The University of New South WalesVictorian Aboriginal Health ServiceThe George Institute for Global Health, The University of New South WalesThe University of TechnologyThe Glen Centre (Ngampie)Nunkuwarrin Yunti of South AustraliaThe University of SydneyAboriginal Medical Services Alliance Northern TerritoryBrain and Mind Centre and Central Clinical School University of SydneyWardliparingga Aboriginal Research Unit, South Australian Health and Medical Research InstituteThe George Institute for Global Health, The University of New South WalesAbstract Background The Getting it Right study determined the validity, sensitivity, specificity and acceptability of the culturally adapted 9-item Patient Health Questionnaire (aPHQ-9) as a screening tool for depression in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander (hereafter referred to as Indigenous) people. In this process evaluation we aimed to explore staff perceptions about whether Getting it Right was conducted per protocol, and if the aPHQ-9 was considered an acceptable and feasible screening tool for depression in primary healthcare. This process evaluation will provide information for clinicians and policy makers about the experiences of staff and patients with Getting it Right and what they thought about using the aPHQ-9. Methods Process evaluation using grounded theory approaches. Semi-structured interviews with primary healthcare staff from services participating in Getting it Right were triangulated with feedback (free-text and elicited) from participants collected during the validation study and field notes. Data were thematically analysed according to the Getting it Right study protocol to identify the acceptability and feasibility of the aPHQ-9. Results Primary healthcare staff (n = 36) and community members (n = 4) from nine of the ten participating Getting it Right services and Indigenous participants (n = 500) from the ten services that took part. Most staff reported that the research was conducted according to the study protocol. Staff from two services reported sometimes recruiting opportunistically (rather than recruiting consecutive patients attending the service as outlined in the main study protocol), when they spoke to patients who they knew from previous interactions, because they perceived their previous relationship may increase the likelihood of patients participating. All Getting it Right participants responded to at least six of the seven feedback questions and 20% provided free-text feedback. Most staff said they would use the aPHQ-9 and most participants said that the questions were easy to understand (87%), the response categories made sense (89%) and that they felt comfortable answering the questions (91%). Conclusion Getting it Right was predominantly conducted according to the study protocol. The aPHQ-9, the first culturally adapted, nationally validated, freely available depression screening tool for use by Indigenous people, appears to be acceptable and feasible to use. Trial registration Australian New Zealand Clinical Trial Registry ANZCTR12614000705684, 03/07/2014.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-019-7569-4Indigenous healthSocial and emotional wellbeingDepression screeningPrimary healthcareProcess evaluationValidation study
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sara Farnbach
Graham Gee
Anne-Marie Eades
John Robert Evans
Jamie Fernando
Belinda Hammond
Matty Simms
Karrina DeMasi
Nick Glozier
Alex Brown
Maree L. Hackett
on behalf of the Getting it Right Investigators
spellingShingle Sara Farnbach
Graham Gee
Anne-Marie Eades
John Robert Evans
Jamie Fernando
Belinda Hammond
Matty Simms
Karrina DeMasi
Nick Glozier
Alex Brown
Maree L. Hackett
on behalf of the Getting it Right Investigators
Process evaluation of the Getting it Right study and acceptability and feasibility of screening for depression with the aPHQ-9
BMC Public Health
Indigenous health
Social and emotional wellbeing
Depression screening
Primary healthcare
Process evaluation
Validation study
author_facet Sara Farnbach
Graham Gee
Anne-Marie Eades
John Robert Evans
Jamie Fernando
Belinda Hammond
Matty Simms
Karrina DeMasi
Nick Glozier
Alex Brown
Maree L. Hackett
on behalf of the Getting it Right Investigators
author_sort Sara Farnbach
title Process evaluation of the Getting it Right study and acceptability and feasibility of screening for depression with the aPHQ-9
title_short Process evaluation of the Getting it Right study and acceptability and feasibility of screening for depression with the aPHQ-9
title_full Process evaluation of the Getting it Right study and acceptability and feasibility of screening for depression with the aPHQ-9
title_fullStr Process evaluation of the Getting it Right study and acceptability and feasibility of screening for depression with the aPHQ-9
title_full_unstemmed Process evaluation of the Getting it Right study and acceptability and feasibility of screening for depression with the aPHQ-9
title_sort process evaluation of the getting it right study and acceptability and feasibility of screening for depression with the aphq-9
publisher BMC
series BMC Public Health
issn 1471-2458
publishDate 2019-09-01
description Abstract Background The Getting it Right study determined the validity, sensitivity, specificity and acceptability of the culturally adapted 9-item Patient Health Questionnaire (aPHQ-9) as a screening tool for depression in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander (hereafter referred to as Indigenous) people. In this process evaluation we aimed to explore staff perceptions about whether Getting it Right was conducted per protocol, and if the aPHQ-9 was considered an acceptable and feasible screening tool for depression in primary healthcare. This process evaluation will provide information for clinicians and policy makers about the experiences of staff and patients with Getting it Right and what they thought about using the aPHQ-9. Methods Process evaluation using grounded theory approaches. Semi-structured interviews with primary healthcare staff from services participating in Getting it Right were triangulated with feedback (free-text and elicited) from participants collected during the validation study and field notes. Data were thematically analysed according to the Getting it Right study protocol to identify the acceptability and feasibility of the aPHQ-9. Results Primary healthcare staff (n = 36) and community members (n = 4) from nine of the ten participating Getting it Right services and Indigenous participants (n = 500) from the ten services that took part. Most staff reported that the research was conducted according to the study protocol. Staff from two services reported sometimes recruiting opportunistically (rather than recruiting consecutive patients attending the service as outlined in the main study protocol), when they spoke to patients who they knew from previous interactions, because they perceived their previous relationship may increase the likelihood of patients participating. All Getting it Right participants responded to at least six of the seven feedback questions and 20% provided free-text feedback. Most staff said they would use the aPHQ-9 and most participants said that the questions were easy to understand (87%), the response categories made sense (89%) and that they felt comfortable answering the questions (91%). Conclusion Getting it Right was predominantly conducted according to the study protocol. The aPHQ-9, the first culturally adapted, nationally validated, freely available depression screening tool for use by Indigenous people, appears to be acceptable and feasible to use. Trial registration Australian New Zealand Clinical Trial Registry ANZCTR12614000705684, 03/07/2014.
topic Indigenous health
Social and emotional wellbeing
Depression screening
Primary healthcare
Process evaluation
Validation study
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-019-7569-4
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