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Facilitators of and Barriers to Integrating Digital Mental Health Into County Mental Health Services: Qualitative Interview Analyses.

Xin ZhaoNicole A StadnickEduardo Ceballos-CorroJorge CastroKera Mallard-SwansonKristina J PalomaresElizabeth Victoria EikeyMargaret L SchneiderKai ZhengDana B MukamelStephen Matthew SchuellerDara H Sorkin
Published in: JMIR formative research (2023)
The successful implementation of DMHIs requires readiness at the individual, innovation, and organization and system levels. To improve individual-level readiness, we recommend equitable device distribution and digital literacy training. To improve innovation readiness, we recommend making DMHIs easier to use and introduce, clinically useful, and safe and adapting them to fit into the existing client needs and clinical workflow. To improve organization- and system-level readiness, we recommend supporting providers and local behavioral health departments with adequate technology and training and exploring potential system transformations (eg, integrated care model). Conceptualizing DMHIs as services allows the consideration of both the innovation characteristics of DMHIs (eg, efficacy, safety, and clinical usefulness) and the ecosystem around DMHIs, such as individual and organizational characteristics (inner context), purveyors and intermediaries (bridging factor), client characteristics (outer context), as well as the fit between the innovation and implementation settings (innovation factor).
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • mental health
  • primary care
  • quality improvement
  • palliative care
  • public health
  • systematic review
  • health information
  • electronic health record
  • health insurance