Shaping Blended Care: Adapting an Instrument to Support Therapists in Using eMental Health

BackgroundAlthough eMental health interventions, especially when delivered in a blended way, have great potential to improve the quality and efficiency of mental health care, their use in practice lags behind expectations. The Fit for Blended Care (FfBC) instrument was develo...

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Main Authors: Kip, Hanneke, Wentzel, Jobke, Kelders, Saskia M
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2020-11-01
Series:JMIR Mental Health
Online Access:http://mental.jmir.org/2020/11/e24245/
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spelling doaj-bfe84c7089ee4ad2a287580ba009cec42021-05-03T01:42:35ZengJMIR PublicationsJMIR Mental Health2368-79592020-11-01711e2424510.2196/24245Shaping Blended Care: Adapting an Instrument to Support Therapists in Using eMental HealthKip, HannekeWentzel, JobkeKelders, Saskia M BackgroundAlthough eMental health interventions, especially when delivered in a blended way, have great potential to improve the quality and efficiency of mental health care, their use in practice lags behind expectations. The Fit for Blended Care (FfBC) instrument was developed to support therapists and clients in shaping blended care in a way that optimally fits their needs. However, this existing version cannot be directly applied to specific branches of mental health care as it is too broad and generic. ObjectiveThe goal of this study is to adapt the existing FfBC instrument to fit a specific, complex setting—forensic mental health care—by means of participatory development with therapists. MethodsThe participatory process was divided into 4 phases and was executed by a project team consisting of 1 manager, 3-5 therapists, and 1 researcher. In phase 1, general requirements for the adaptation of the existing instrument were discussed in 2 focus groups with the project team. In phase 2, patient-related factors that influence the use of an existing web-based intervention were elicited through semistructured interviews with all 18 therapists working at an outpatient clinic. In phase 3, multiple focus groups with the project teams were held to create the first version of the adapted FfBC instrument. In phase 4, a digital prototype of the instrument was used with 8 patients, and the experiences of the 4 therapists were discussed in a focus group. ResultsIn phase 1, it became clear that the therapists’ main requirement was to develop a much shorter instrument with a few items, in which the content was specifically tailored to the characteristics of forensic psychiatric outpatients. The interviews showed a broad range of patient-related factors, of which 5 were used in the instrument: motivation for blended treatment; writing about thoughts, feelings, and behavior; conscientiousness; psychosocial problems; and social support. In addition, a part of the instrument was focused on the practical necessary preconditions that patients should fill by themselves before the treatment was developed. The use of the web-based prototype of the instrument in treatment resulted in overall positive experiences with the content; however, therapists indicated that the items should be formulated in a more patient-centered way to encourage their involvement in discussing the factors. ConclusionsThe participatory, iterative process of this study resulted in an adapted version of the FfBC instrument that fits the specific forensic context and supports shared decision making. In general, the adaptiveness of the instrument is important: its content and implementation should fit the type of care, the organization, and eHealth intervention. To adapt the instrument to other contexts, the guidelines described in this paper can be followed.http://mental.jmir.org/2020/11/e24245/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kip, Hanneke
Wentzel, Jobke
Kelders, Saskia M
spellingShingle Kip, Hanneke
Wentzel, Jobke
Kelders, Saskia M
Shaping Blended Care: Adapting an Instrument to Support Therapists in Using eMental Health
JMIR Mental Health
author_facet Kip, Hanneke
Wentzel, Jobke
Kelders, Saskia M
author_sort Kip, Hanneke
title Shaping Blended Care: Adapting an Instrument to Support Therapists in Using eMental Health
title_short Shaping Blended Care: Adapting an Instrument to Support Therapists in Using eMental Health
title_full Shaping Blended Care: Adapting an Instrument to Support Therapists in Using eMental Health
title_fullStr Shaping Blended Care: Adapting an Instrument to Support Therapists in Using eMental Health
title_full_unstemmed Shaping Blended Care: Adapting an Instrument to Support Therapists in Using eMental Health
title_sort shaping blended care: adapting an instrument to support therapists in using emental health
publisher JMIR Publications
series JMIR Mental Health
issn 2368-7959
publishDate 2020-11-01
description BackgroundAlthough eMental health interventions, especially when delivered in a blended way, have great potential to improve the quality and efficiency of mental health care, their use in practice lags behind expectations. The Fit for Blended Care (FfBC) instrument was developed to support therapists and clients in shaping blended care in a way that optimally fits their needs. However, this existing version cannot be directly applied to specific branches of mental health care as it is too broad and generic. ObjectiveThe goal of this study is to adapt the existing FfBC instrument to fit a specific, complex setting—forensic mental health care—by means of participatory development with therapists. MethodsThe participatory process was divided into 4 phases and was executed by a project team consisting of 1 manager, 3-5 therapists, and 1 researcher. In phase 1, general requirements for the adaptation of the existing instrument were discussed in 2 focus groups with the project team. In phase 2, patient-related factors that influence the use of an existing web-based intervention were elicited through semistructured interviews with all 18 therapists working at an outpatient clinic. In phase 3, multiple focus groups with the project teams were held to create the first version of the adapted FfBC instrument. In phase 4, a digital prototype of the instrument was used with 8 patients, and the experiences of the 4 therapists were discussed in a focus group. ResultsIn phase 1, it became clear that the therapists’ main requirement was to develop a much shorter instrument with a few items, in which the content was specifically tailored to the characteristics of forensic psychiatric outpatients. The interviews showed a broad range of patient-related factors, of which 5 were used in the instrument: motivation for blended treatment; writing about thoughts, feelings, and behavior; conscientiousness; psychosocial problems; and social support. In addition, a part of the instrument was focused on the practical necessary preconditions that patients should fill by themselves before the treatment was developed. The use of the web-based prototype of the instrument in treatment resulted in overall positive experiences with the content; however, therapists indicated that the items should be formulated in a more patient-centered way to encourage their involvement in discussing the factors. ConclusionsThe participatory, iterative process of this study resulted in an adapted version of the FfBC instrument that fits the specific forensic context and supports shared decision making. In general, the adaptiveness of the instrument is important: its content and implementation should fit the type of care, the organization, and eHealth intervention. To adapt the instrument to other contexts, the guidelines described in this paper can be followed.
url http://mental.jmir.org/2020/11/e24245/
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