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SchoolBased Mental Health: Complementary or Synergistic

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School-Based Mental Health: Complementary or Synergistic? Marc S. Atkins, Ph.D. ... Jaleel Adil, Carl Bell, Dina Birman, Lucille Eber, David Farmer, Stacy Frazier, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: SchoolBased Mental Health: Complementary or Synergistic


1
School-Based Mental Health Complementary or
Synergistic?
  • Marc S. Atkins, Ph.D.
  • and Elizabeth Talbott, Ph.D.
  • University of Illinois at Chicago

2
Key Collaborators
  • Jaleel Adil, Carl Bell, Dina Birman, Lucille
    Eber, David Farmer, Stacy Frazier, Robert
    Gibbons, Patricia Graczyk, Colette Lueck, Mary
    McKay, Peter Nierman
  • National Institute of Mental Health
  • R01MH56491, R01MH62629, R21MH067361

3
Presentation Goals
  • Review limitations of dominant school-based
    mental health models
  • Present rationale for alternative model with
    synergistic mental health and educational goals
  • Present data from two studies in Chicago Public
    Schools and ongoing collaboration with Illinois
    Office of Mental Health

4
Mental Health System Failing Children
  • 7.5 million U.S. children with unmet mental
    health need
  • Only 21 of children in need receive services
    within year
  • Uninsured especially vulnerable

5
EffectivenessBridging Science and Service
  • Gap in effectiveness from university-based to
    community-based
  • Need for research that informs clinical practice
  • Need for sustainable services that work in the
    real world

6
Why School-Based Mental Health?
  • Consistently available resource
  • De facto mental health provider
  • Children readily available for services

7
Clinic-Based School Consultation
  • Used inconsistently in clinics despite prominence
    of school problems in clinic-referred children
  • Targeted to referred students only and therefore
    difficult to engage teachers
  • Recommendations often too complex for teachers to
    manage

8
School-Based Mental HealthSchool Health Clinics
  • Increase from 120 in 1988 to 1200 in 1998
  • Serve 1.1 million students (2 of students)
  • Shift from CBMH to hospitals
  • Primarily individual counseling
  • Parents less involved in services

9
Prevention Programs
  • Universal interventions primarily focused on
    substance abuse and violence
  • Strong evidence for effectiveness when used with
    high fidelity to program goals
  • Sustainability difficult to obtain
  • Adoption by schools often through school
    improvement plan but fidelity not clear

10
Social Emotional Learning
  • Emotion regulation, social problem-solving,
    self-control, friendship skills
  • Teacher implemented often through character
    education
  • Need for teachers to incorporate communication
    and problem-solving into every day interactions
  • Links to achievement not confirmed

11
Rationale for Synergistic Model
  • Schools under tremendous pressure, especially in
    urban communities
  • School goals are mental health goals
  • Collaboration can benefit both education and
    mental health

12
Schools Under Pressure
  • Inclusion
  • Academic accountability
  • Gap between rich and poor

13
Inner City Schools Need Help4th Grade Reading
14
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15
School ViolenceNational Center for Education
Statistics
  • 57 of public schools reported one or more
    violent incident
  • 45 of parents fear for childs safety at school
  • 40 of teens blame school shootings on peer
    problems

16
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17
School ReformMany Players, Few Answers
  • Theory should be as simple as possible but no
    simpler. John Tukey
  • For every complex problem there is a simple
    solution that is wrong. H. L. Mencken

18
School Goals Are Mental Health Goals
  • Schooling critical to childrens long-term
    adjustment
  • Learning problems evident in 20 to 60 of
    children referred for mental health concerns
  • School provides opportunity to impact
    socialization

19
Synergistic GoalsPredictors of School Success
  • Effective instruction
  • Classroom management
  • Positive teacher-student relationships
  • Parental involvement

20
Ecological Models Study of reciprocal relations
among natural elements in an environment
  • Context drives behavior
  • Multiple influences on behavior
  • Enhance existing systemic resources
  • Individualized and flexible services

21
Ecological Model for School-Based Mental Health
Services
  • Improve access for families
  • Impact school functioning
  • Reliance on indigenous resources

NIMH (R01MH56491)
22
PALS Intervention Model
Teacher-centered classroom-based
Systematic Assessment
Collaborative Partnership
Engagement
Family-linked
23
Experimental Design
  • K-4 children with DBD referred by teachers
  • Random assignment of classrooms within grades to
    PALS vs. clinic-based services
  • All services billed through Medicaid
  • 3 schools, 32 classrooms, 127 families

24
Service UsePALS versus Clinic
25
Service UseFollow-Up
26
You are invited to the PALS Parent Party
Talk about Getting involved with your kids
education
Gladstone Elementary School Thursday, March 18,
1999 Drop in 400pm - 600pm
Child care will be provided.
27
Parent ServicesMultiple Opportunities
Percent
28
Teacher Retention1-Year
  • Teachers describe staff as helpful, supportive,
    and advocates for students
  • In year 3, active focus on academic goals in
    addition to behavioral goals

29
Teacher Collaboration
  • Resistance is bidirectional
  • Passive No vs. Active No
  • Expert power vs. referent power

30
PALS Teachers Target Behaviors
31
Mental Health Collaboration
  • Year 2 focused on classroom management
  • Year 3 added curriculum-based assessment and
    reciprocal peer tutoring

32
Impacting Academics Peer Mentoring
  • Cross-age tutoring
  • At-risk students as effective as others
  • Popular with teachers and students

33
Impacting Academics Desk Organization Game
  • 3rd Grade
  • Posted rules
  • Demonstration and practice
  • Random checks
  • Earn 1-7 points
  • Classwide reward

34
School-Based Services Effects
End of year partial correlations controlling for
pretest scores
35
Negative Classroom Behavior Effects
  • End of year deterioration (monthly reports
    indicated progress)?
  • Worst behaved students get most mental health
    attention?
  • Mental health recommendations not appropriate for
    these teachers?
  • Clinicians lack influence?

36
Teacher Key Opinion LeadersStudy Goals
  • To study the influence of KOL teachers on the
    diffusion of information regarding classroom
    behavior management practices
  • To facilitate use of recommended strategies by
    classroom teachers for ADHD students in urban low
    income schools
  • NIMH (R01MH629591)

37
Social Diffusion Theory
  • Innovative interventions often initiated by a
    relatively small segment of opinion leaders
  • Via modeling, innovations are diffused through
    the population, influencing others
  • Rogers (1983) noted that despite their knowledge,
    professional change agents often have little or
    no influence

38
Social Diffusion TheoryHistory
  • Rogers (1993) observed farmers use of innovative
    techniques
  • Coleman et al. (1966) studied diffusion of new
    medicine through social network of physicians
  • Kelly et al. (1991, 1992) used popular patrons of
    gay bars to diffuse safe-sex information to gay
    men
  • Not studied in schools

39
Study Procedures
  • Random selection of 10 schools from 64
  • Identify KOL teachers through sociometric surveys
    with classroom teachers (n 159)
  • KOL teachers mental health staff attend course
    on ADHD best practices
  • Study whether KOL teachers are more influential
    with classroom teachers than are mental health
    providers

40
KOL TeachersSimilar to Other Teachers
41
KOL TeachersBut More Experienced
42
Web-based CourseCPS ADHD Manual
  • 1 semester graduate course CE credit
  • Co-taught in education and psychiatry
  • Teachers and mental health providers participated
  • Discussion practice
  • Academic behavioral strategies

43
Year 2Naturalistic Study
  • Monitored KOL diffusion efforts (classroom
    teacher reports)
  • No mental health provider support
  • Classroom teachers
  • KOL n 30, Control n 32

44
Recommended Strategies
  • Peer tutoring
  • Curriculum based assessment
  • Individual rewards and accommodations
  • Class-wide rewards
  • School-home notes
  • Good behavior game
  • Response cost

45
KOL Teachers Opportunities to Share
46
Type of KOL Support
  • Instrumental Support
  • Recommended interventions
  • Shared materials
  • Modeled interventions
  • Social Support

47
KOL Support Teachers Use of Interventions
48
Year 3 KOL Activation Year
  • School-wide ADHD in-service training at each
    school
  • Mental health provider support provided to all
    teachers
  • Classroom Teachers
  • KOL n 34, Control n 42

49
KOL Involvement
  • Participated in ADHD in-service training at their
    school
  • Met weekly with mental health staff to consult on
    classroom practices
  • Encouraged to provide direct consultation with
    teachers

50
Teachers Use of Interventions
51
Specific StrategiesProbability of Use by Group
52
Mean Effectiveness Across Groups
53
Mechanism for KOL Influence
  • High correspondence between instrumental and
    social support suggesting a social network effect
  • Mental health support not significantly
    associated with teachers use of strategies in
    either condition
  • KOL influence appears to accelerate timing of use
    but not effectiveness

54
KOL Next Steps
  • Activate full mental health support
  • Identify strategies to promote KOL modeling and
    coaching through professional development
  • Target four predictors of effective teaching

55
Bringing It All TogetherIDMH CPS
56
Systems of Care-Chicago
  • 6 year SAMHSA grant to evaluate system of care
    model for inner city
  • Link community mental health agency with
    neighborhood school
  • Prevention and intervention
  • Tension School goals vs. mental health goals

57
Mental Health and School Change in Urban
Communities
Individual
Intensive 10
Level 3
Classroom-based
Targeted 40
Level 2
School-wide
Universal 50
Level 1
58
Effective CollaborationComplementary or
Synergistic?
  • Should universal interventions focus on
    predictors of student learning or social
    emotional learning?
  • Should targeted interventions focus on at-risk
    students or at-risk teachers?
  • Should intensive interventions address school or
    family stressors?
  • Can we do it all?

59
Teacher SupportWhat Can MH Staff Do?
  • Supportive and therapeutic relationships
  • Link teachers to each other
  • Support students learning
  • Skill development (classroom management, stress
    management, parent involvement, curriculum
    development)

60
ConclusionComplementary or Synergistic?
  • Urban schools and mental health system have
    pressing needs for strong collaboration
  • Key indicators of effective learning are
    appropriate goals for childrens mental health
  • Synergistic school and mental health goals can
    improve both systems by integrating mental health
    services into the ongoing context of childrens
    development
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