Current challenges for health services research are to strengthen, sustain, and disseminate practice interventions that improve the quality of care, promote access for those with unmet need, and increase efficiency so that care is affordable for all
(7,
8). Traditional health services research approaches, whether observational or experimental, may be insufficient to meet these challenges. Rosenheck
(9) has argued that research interventions are buffered from the demands that systems face in a more open community environment, where program and treatment choices are made according to the priorities of multiple stakeholders and in the context of changing ownership and diverse policy influences. Furthermore, health services research interventions and evaluations are commonly designed by experts and may not reflect the values of administrators, providers, and consumers making program decisions in community-based service settings.
Background
To date, health services research has generated information aimed at reducing unmet mental health need through two main approaches. The first has been by evaluating how policy initiatives or market trends affect access, quality, or outcomes of care. Policy initiatives and evaluations typically have broad public scope. For the most part, evaluations of recent policy initiatives, such as parity bills, and market trends, such as the rapid growth of managed care, have not addressed outcomes of mental health care. Results concerning mental health care access or quality have been either contradictory across studies or suggest limited impact
(12–
16). High unmet need for appropriate care for psychiatric disorders persists, even as the policy and market environment changes dramatically
(2,
3).
The second research approach has been in developing and evaluating practice-based interventions designed to improve quality of care. Successful examples of effective or cost-effective approaches include quality improvement interventions based on the collaborative care model of chronic disease management for depression in primary care
(17–
19), assertive community treatment for adults with severe mental disorders
(20–
22), and multisystem therapy for children with severe conduct disorders
(23). Although such interventions are currently the subject of dissemination efforts, most evidence-based quality improvement interventions have had limited public impact because practices do not sustain them and they are not adopted by other practices
(6,
14). The reasons are multifaceted and often reflect forces both inside and outside the health care system
(24). For example, clinical practices may not be the most efficient venue for reducing stigma, a major barrier to care
(7,
8). Addressing such concerns may require empowering consumers through public education and local community support.
Community intervention approaches have been used successfully to promote community participation and enhance responsiveness to public health priorities
(10,
11). Health services interventions typically target consumers or plan enrollees, providers, or health care administrators or policy makers. Community interventions either 1) target communities (community targeted); 2) use community resources and change strategies based in communities (community based); or 3) are oriented to the needs, perspectives, and priorities of communities and empower them to achieve their goals (community driven)
(10). More fundamentally, a community perspective offers a unique philosophical orientation for improving health through reaching the public or promoting participation, neither of which is a strong feature of health services research.
Few mental health studies have used community intervention strategies. Mental health preventive intervention research, for example, is largely limited to extensions of practice interventions to high-risk groups
(25). Public campaigns for mental disorders have had few rigorous evaluations
(26). Nevertheless, community interventions have been widely used to address other major public health problems and improve the management of chronic disease. For example, public campaigns have been used to reduce behavioral risk factors, increase early detection and intervention, and promote adherence with recommended treatments for heart disease, diabetes, and cancer
(11,
26–28), including for stigmatized conditions like HIV infection
(29,
30). Recent research initiatives by foundations and federal agencies, including the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
(31), the National Center on Minority Health and Health Disparities
(32), and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(33), encourage community participatory research, partly as a result of community demand for relevant interventions
(34).
Integrated Research Model
The Institute of Medicine recommends integrating principles from quality improvement intervention and community participatory intervention through a community health improvement process to achieve a broader change in the health of communities
(93). The community health improvement process model is based on two stages of intervention development and evaluation. The first stage builds a community stakeholder coalition to monitor community health indicators and identify community health priorities. The second stage involves developing, implementing, and evaluating the impact of health improvement strategies designed to address those high-priority health concerns. The focus of this model is on monitoring community health indicators and developing feasible strategies within communities to improve the health concerns of interest, according to local priorities. The community health improvement process is iterative, similar to continuous quality improvement processes for health care improvement
(87–
89). A multisite demonstration based on this model showed health improvements for some population subgroups in two of nine demonstration communities
(94,
95), but the full model has been neither implemented nor evaluated
(93). Furthermore, the testimony of programs that had attempted the model suggested that it was complex and often not feasible and that communities may not necessarily choose evidence-based solutions
(93).
We propose an alternative approach, the evidence-based community/partnership model, that is designed to support health improvement goals through evidence-based strategies while building community and practice capacity to implement those strategies in a manner consistent with community priorities, culture, and values. This model relies on a partnership between communities, community advocates, health care practices, and researchers, blending techniques of community participatory intervention and evidence-based quality improvement programs.
The first step of our proposed evidence-based community/partnership model relies on developing a negotiated set of goals among local community stakeholders, practices, and researchers. This might range from having the community voice its priorities regarding service improvements to implementing evidence-based practice interventions with a public inner-city hospital. Among psychiatric disorders, examples well suited to an evidence-based approach might include improving care for schizophrenia, depressive disorder, or attention deficit disorder. However, psychiatric disorders and treatments may be poorly understood by communities, especially as diagnostic criteria and therapeutic interventions have been evolving. This suggests a need for capacity building through empowerment education
(73).
The second step focuses on matching community needs, resources, and values with evidence-based practice strategies to address unmet need and tailored to the community context. This may involve adapting practice interventions for local community practices and developing complementary community interventions to extend the reach of practice interventions into the community. It may also include building capacity in the practices to increase the engagement and retention of economically disadvantaged clients to benefit from evidence-based care or building the capacity of community agencies to access practice interventions. The evidence-based community/partnership model differs from the community health improvement process model in specifically bridging to an evidence-based intervention and focusing on health and health care change strategies rather than a health-monitoring process
(93).
A key feature of the evidence-based community/partnership model is using a participatory process to define and enable complementary community intervention activities that support the principles of the practice intervention, as well as to adapt the practice intervention to respond to the needs, priorities, and culture of the target community. These activities involve identifying key functions that could be performed within the community to extend the reach and impact of the program. Examples of functions are screening for depression through health fairs or web-based programs in education centers; facilitating referral to practices hosting evidence-based quality improvement programs through lay health workers; or developing social programs, for example, through lay groups in faith-based organizations or parent associations in schools. Another community function might be reinforcing therapeutic goals through social or material support, such as providing resources for transportation to visits or providing outlets for increased social activities that are recommended by therapists.
Given a set of defined functions, a participatory process can be used to define intervention roles and to specify necessary personnel to provide those functions. Protocols that document the roles and functions can be used to support community staff training and increase program reproducibility and reliability.
During intervention development and implementation, partnership members may adopt different roles at different project stages; one indicator of a successful partnership may be flexibility in shifting roles to support different goals. For example, in adapting an existing evidence-based practice strategy locally, the community serves as an implementation partner. In contrast, when determining how to build service capacity given a weak local health care infrastructure, the community serves the role of leader and activist, aided by research knowledge and political support. Community, practice, and research teams serve complementary roles in understanding local cultural norms and in matching expectations and conflicts in the community with proposed intervention activities
(87). Furthermore, in initiating new program directions, the research team may collaborate with the community leaders as capacity builders
(71). But even this capacity-building role for researchers could emerge from a participatory analysis of options with the community partners. From the practice’s perspective, their role may be as a laboratory to test the adoption of interventions (the practice in the role of recipient/site of the intervention)
(87), as a generator of solutions for improving access (the practice as leader), or as a consultant on what strategies work and under what conditions they can be sustained (the practice as expert advisor). Thus, role definitions of partners may vary as a function of the goals, community resources, practice context, history of interactions among stakeholders, funding constraints, and other factors
(34).
Community development approaches can potentially encompass the range of partnership roles just outlined
(71). Overall, the evidence-based community/partnership model uses community development and participatory public health intervention principles to achieve a fit of community need, experience, and priorities; practice capacities; and research evidence on how change can be achieved and to estimate the likely consequences. In such a collaboration, all partners have equal importance.
The evidence-based community/partnership model incorporates outcomes that span those of primary interest to the community stakeholders, as well as those that reflect outcomes adapted from successful effectiveness studies of evidence-based practices. However, existing data sources in the community are unlikely to include outcome measures used in prior effectiveness trials, posing challenges to implementing outcomes evaluation. Attending to community outcomes priorities may require a focus on factors such as a reduction of violence in neighborhoods or use of after-school programs. In this case, the research team would work with the community to determine the evidence basis for those outcomes in relationship to the designed program or suggest modifications of the program to better influence those outcomes and develop appropriate measures of them within the community.
By way of illustration, an evidence-based community/partnership initiative might focus on depression as a problem of interest to researchers, a given community, and local practices. The participatory community partnership identifying this priority and developing the evidence-based community partnership might include representatives from a local housing project, a community-based advocacy group, a local faith-based organization serving the poor, a representative of the mayor’s office, and local mental health services and community researchers. A goal might be set of introducing an existing evidence-based practice quality improvement intervention, such as Partners in Care
(4), into a free clinic, by using a nurse care manager and training local physicians, with a link to a local mental health clinic. The planning group might decide that broader community outreach of this program could be achieved through monthly health fairs spanning diet, exercise, and depression management and cosponsored by a faith-based organization and a school. At the fair, free, confidential screenings of families could be provided by health workers. Broader community education might be promoted through community meetings in schools or on a local radio talk show. At the health fair, trained health workers could follow up on those who screen positive with a home visit or a telephone call and serve as a referral source for the local public health clinic. To reduce the burden on the clinic for this expanded caseload, the health workers might offer to conduct home visits for existing patients. Resources to meet community needs, such as housing or transportation vouchers provided by the mayor’s office, could be coordinated through a trained home-helper service or a faith-based volunteer workforce. Central to all of these activities, however, is the goal of increasing access to appropriate (evidence-based) care and community support to reduce unmet need for such care. This kind of intervention model would be difficult to either design or implement without extensive community-based partnership.
The evaluation would focus on the process of development of the evidence-based community/partnership intervention, including the development process’ effects on those participating, the costs of running the program, and the effects of the program itself on those screened and served in terms of access to care, quality of care, and health outcomes. Other outcomes of interest might be identified by the community. Depending on its scope, change in community awareness might be assessed through a community telephone or household survey or through focus groups in community settings. The project would initially require a qualitative process evaluation and more a formal mixed methods evaluation of the impact of implementation.
The evidence-based community/partnership model differs from a fully participatory process, which could lead to more sustained change but not necessarily to use of evidence-informed strategies. It differs from a practice-based quality improvement intervention in its focus on developing community capacity and compatibility of the intervention within local culture. It differs from the community health improvement process in focusing on quality improvement and evidence-based strategies rather than on health monitoring. Achieving the negotiated goal-setting process we propose may be challenging and suggests a new role for mental health services researchers within communities. The norms of “deliberative democracy” proposed by Daniels
(96) offer one approach for establishing a fair process of integrating community, practice, and research priorities.
Implementing such interventions safely would likely require guidelines for ethical use of confidential information outside the context of health care settings. While the extent of social stigmatization of persons with mental disorders may raise concerns about community-based screening and other intervention activities, similar approaches have been used effectively for other stigmatized conditions
(8,
29,
30). Community participants, for example, would have to be warned of real risks, such as embarrassment or job or insurance coverage losses, if a history of depression is disclosed through activities occurring outside health care environments. Communication with community organizations would have to be compliant with Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act regulations and local standards of practice.
Discussion
Mental health services research interventions have focused on health policy initiatives or practice programs to improve access to appropriate care in response to widespread concerns about health care system factors contributing to a “quality chasm”
(24). Community interventions focus on behavioral change of the public or the development of communities and social action targets based on community priorities not necessarily involving health care change. Health services research interventions are often expert driven, while community interventions range from expert driven to participatory. Across such approaches, the environmental context for intervention is complex, and multiple stakeholders are involved, leading to challenges in intervention design, implementation, and evaluation
(9). The scope of implementation for applied studies can limit evaluation options, but generally, health services interventions have been evaluated through randomized or quasi-experimental designs, while community interventions are typically evaluated through case study and action research models by using qualitative or mixed methods, with a strong focus on the intervention process.
Despite differences in perspectives and methods, community and health services intervention approaches may offer new opportunities to achieve goals of public health reach and sustainability. The NIMH Working Group on Research on Affective Disorders
(97) recently suggested exploring such community intervention models as an alternative paradigm for increasing public reach or addressing health disparities that have not been articulated
(7,
8,
11,
12,
92). Evidence of broad societal impacts, such as reduced unemployment resulting from practice-based interventions for depression, reinforce the potential benefits to diverse communities of facilitating better access to appropriate care
(4,
92).
Exploring this new integration will require interdisciplinary collaborations and training that span public health, health services, community, and policy research; qualitative, quantitative, and mixed methods; and investigator skill in community participatory research and coalition building as well as evidence-based practice interventions. Development of this field may require academic departments and schools to broaden their criteria for academic promotion, for example, to include evidence of community health improvement and other positive impacts on communities as promotion criteria and to more strongly value team contributions as evidence of important scholarly activity.
In summary, we raise the question of whether community interventions can potentiate the effect of practice-based interventions while improving consumer centeredness and community relevance. While the field should initially focus on exploring the feasibility and potential impact on community populations, in the long run, the field should focus on whether such approaches achieve either more enduring or far-reaching reductions in the individual and societal burden of mental illness for diverse communities, in which burden is defined at least partly in community terms.