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Primary Care Behavioral Health Fidelity Metrics as a Quality Improvement Tool
PIs: Aubrey Dueweke, Ph.D., Robert “Matthew” Tolliver, Ph.D., Jodi Polaha, Ph.D.
Although developers of the PCBH model have articulated a descriptive “recipe” for its successful delivery (i.e., GATHER; see Reiter, Dobmeyer, & Hunter, 2018), there is inconsistency in how this recipe has been operationalized across settings, perhaps due to a lack of clear guidelines for measuring fidelity to the model. This lack of consistent measurement and reporting of model fidelity makes it difficult to effectively compare and interpret results of PCBH implementation across sites and studies. As such, the aims of this project are to:
1) measure fidelity to the PCBH model across ETSU Health clinics, using objective fidelity metrics extracted from the electronic medical record (EMR) and observational coding of provider behaviors;
2) evaluate the role of fidelity metrics as a quality improvement tool; and
3) articulate a set of methods and procedures that other teams hoping to implement PCBH can follow for measuring and reporting fidelity in the future.
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College Student Mental Health and Help Seeking
PI: Aubrey Dueweke, Ph.D.
The aim of this project is to explore how various factors contribute to college students’ decisions whether to seek help for mental health problems.
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Help Seeking during Suicidal Crises
PI: Aubrey Dueweke, Ph.D.
Although suicide risk factors and interventions to prevent suicidal crises are well-researched, less attention has been paid to the efforts people make during a suicidal crisis to seek help, despite evidence suggesting only a small fraction of those in crisis seek formal assistance. Given the lack of information about outcomes for help-seeking for suicidal crises and the severity of the concern, more research is required. In particular, qualitative research to understand (versus explain) the phenomenon of help-seeking at such a critical time is warranted (Hjelmeland & Knizek, 2010).This study uses primarily qualitative methods to answer the following questions:
1) What, if any, helping resources do people access when they are feeling suicidal?
2) How do others respond to these help-seeking attempts? Have these resources been helpful, harmful, etc.?
3) What barriers do people face when trying to seek help for a suicidal crisis?
4) How can we improve the broad spectrum of mental health care to reduce these barriers and make it more likely we can provide people in a suicidal crisis with appropriate, responsive, and just-in-time care?
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Pathways to Mental Health Care in Tennessee
PI: Aubrey Dueweke, Ph.D.
The aim of this project is to explore help-seeking processes and pathways to mental health care for individuals in Northeast Tennessee. Among other variables, we will be evaluating and comparing delays between onset of mental health concerns, initiation of help-seeking, and receipt of treatment among patients being seen by behavioral health professionals in primary care versus community mental health settings. We will also investigate variables that may influence the likelihood of someone returning to future mental health appointments, and see whether these factors differ across treatment settings.
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Developing Psychometrically Validated Measures of Satisfaction with the PCBH Model
PIs: Aubrey Dueweke, Ph.D., Mara Sindoni, M.A., Nicole Buhr
The aim of this project is to develop psychometrically validated measures of patient and primary care provider satisfaction with PCBH integration, using expert feedback, factor analysis, and evaluations of concurrent and discriminant validity.
Stout Drive Road Closure