17 results on '"Bartholomew, Tom"'
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2. Proceedings of the 8th Annual Conference on the Science of Dissemination and Implementation
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Chambers, David, Simpson, Lisa, Hill-Briggs, Felicia, Neta, Gila, Vinson, Cynthia, Beidas, Rinad, Marcus, Steven, Aarons, Gregory, Hoagwood, Kimberly, Schoenwald, Sonja, Evans, Arthur, Hurford, Matthew, Rubin, Ronnie, Hadley, Trevor, Barg, Frances, Walsh, Lucia, Adams, Danielle, Mandell, David, Martin, Lindsey, Mignogna, Joseph, Mott, Juliette, Hundt, Natalie, Kauth, Michael, Kunik, Mark, Naik, Aanand, Cully, Jeffrey, McGuire, Alan, White, Dominique, Bartholomew, Tom, McGrew, John, Luther, Lauren, Rollins, Angie, Salyers, Michelle, Cooper, Brittany, Funaiole, Angie, Richards, Julie, Lee, Amy, Lapham, Gwen, Caldeiro, Ryan, Lozano, Paula, Gildred, Tory, Achtmeyer, Carol, Ludman, Evette, Addis, Megan, Marx, Larry, Bradley, Katharine, VanDeinse, Tonya, Wilson, Amy Blank, Stacey, Burgin, Powell, Byron, Bunger, Alicia, Cuddeback, Gary, Barnett, Miya, Stadnick, Nicole, Brookman-Frazee, Lauren, Lau, Anna, Dorsey, Shannon, Pullmann, Michael, Mitchell, Shannon, Schwartz, Robert, Kirk, Arethusa, Dusek, Kristi, Oros, Marla, Hosler, Colleen, Gryczynski, Jan, Barbosa, Carolina, Dunlap, Laura, Lounsbury, David, O’Grady, Kevin, Brown, Barry, Damschroder, Laura, Waltz, Thomas, Ritchie, Mona, Atkins, David, Imel, Zac E, Xiao, Bo, Can, Doğan, Georgiou, Panayiotis, Narayanan, Shrikanth, Berkel, Cady, Gallo, Carlos, Sandler, Irwin, Brown, C Hendricks, Wolchik, Sharlene, Mauricio, Anne Marie, Mehrotra, Sanjay, Chandurkar, Dharmendra, Bora, Siddhartha, Das, Arup, Tripathi, Anand, Saggurti, Niranjan, Raj, Anita, Hughes, Eric, Jacobs, Brian, and Kirkendall, Eric
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Psychology ,Pediatric ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Prevention ,Comparative Effectiveness Research ,Clinical Research ,Mental Health ,Health Services ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Good Health and Well Being ,Information and Computing Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Health Policy & Services ,Biomedical and clinical sciences - Abstract
A1 Introduction to the 8th Annual Conference on the Science of Dissemination and Implementation: Optimizing Personal and Population Health David Chambers, Lisa Simpson D1 Discussion forum: Population health D&I research Felicia Hill-Briggs D2 Discussion forum: Global health D&I research Gila Neta, Cynthia Vinson D3 Discussion forum: Precision medicine and D&I research David Chambers S1 Predictors of community therapists’ use of therapy techniques in a large public mental health system Rinad Beidas, Steven Marcus, Gregory Aarons, Kimberly Hoagwood, Sonja Schoenwald, Arthur Evans, Matthew Hurford, Ronnie Rubin, Trevor Hadley, Frances Barg, Lucia Walsh, Danielle Adams, David Mandell S2 Implementing brief cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) in primary care: Clinicians' experiences from the field Lindsey Martin, Joseph Mignogna, Juliette Mott, Natalie Hundt, Michael Kauth, Mark Kunik, Aanand Naik, Jeffrey Cully S3 Clinician competence: Natural variation, factors affecting, and effect on patient outcomes Alan McGuire, Dominique White, Tom Bartholomew, John McGrew, Lauren Luther, Angie Rollins, Michelle Salyers S4 Exploring the multifaceted nature of sustainability in community-based prevention: A mixed-method approach Brittany Cooper, Angie Funaiole S5 Theory informed behavioral health integration in primary care: Mixed methods evaluation of the implementation of routine depression and alcohol screening and assessment Julie Richards, Amy Lee, Gwen Lapham, Ryan Caldeiro, Paula Lozano, Tory Gildred, Carol Achtmeyer, Evette Ludman, Megan Addis, Larry Marx, Katharine Bradley S6 Enhancing the evidence for specialty mental health probation through a hybrid efficacy and implementation study Tonya VanDeinse, Amy Blank Wilson, Burgin Stacey, Byron Powell, Alicia Bunger, Gary Cuddeback S7 Personalizing evidence-based child mental health care within a fiscally mandated policy reform Miya Barnett, Nicole Stadnick, Lauren Brookman-Frazee, Anna Lau S8 Leveraging an existing resource for technical assistance: Community-based supervisors in public mental health Shannon Dorsey, Michael Pullmann S9 SBIRT implementation for adolescents in urban federally qualified health centers: Implementation outcomes Shannon Mitchell, Robert Schwartz, Arethusa Kirk, Kristi Dusek, Marla Oros, Colleen Hosler, Jan Gryczynski, Carolina Barbosa, Laura Dunlap, David Lounsbury, Kevin O'Grady, Barry Brown S10 PANEL: Tailoring Implementation Strategies to Context - Expert recommendations for tailoring strategies to context Laura Damschroder, Thomas Waltz, Byron Powell S11 PANEL: Tailoring Implementation Strategies to Context - Extreme facilitation: Helping challenged healthcare settings implement complex programs Mona Ritchie S12 PANEL: Tailoring Implementation Strategies to Context - Using menu-based choice tasks to obtain expert recommendations for implementing three high-priority practices in the VA Thomas Waltz S13 PANEL: The Use of Technology to Improve Efficient Monitoring of Implementation of Evidence-based Programs - Siri, rate my therapist: Using technology to automate fidelity ratings of motivational interviewing David Atkins, Zac E. Imel, Bo Xiao, Doğan Can, Panayiotis Georgiou, Shrikanth Narayanan S14 PANEL: The Use of Technology to Improve Efficient Monitoring of Implementation of Evidence-based Programs - Identifying indicators of implementation quality for computer-based ratings Cady Berkel, Carlos Gallo, Irwin Sandler, C. Hendricks Brown, Sharlene Wolchik, Anne Marie Mauricio S15 PANEL: The Use of Technology to Improve Efficient Monitoring of Implementation of Evidence-based Programs - Improving implementation of behavioral interventions by monitoring emotion in spoken speech Carlos Gallo, C. Hendricks Brown, Sanjay Mehrotra S16 Scorecards and dashboards to assure data quality of health management information system (HMIS) using R Dharmendra Chandurkar, Siddhartha Bora, Arup Das, Anand Tripathi, Niranjan Saggurti, Anita Raj S17 A big data approach for discovering and implementing patient safety insights Eric Hughes, Brian Jacobs, Eric Kirkendall S18 Improving the efficacy of a depression registry for use in a collaborative care model Danielle Loeb, Katy Trinkley, Michael Yang, Andrew Sprowell, Donald Nease S19 Measurement feedback systems as a strategy to support implementation of measurement-based care in behavioral health Aaron Lyon, Cara Lewis, Meredith Boyd, Abigail Melvin, Semret Nicodimos, Freda Liu, Nathanial Jungbluth S20 PANEL: Implementation Science and Learning Health Systems: Intersections and Commonalities - Common loop assay: Methods of supporting learning collaboratives Allen Flynn S21 PANEL: Implementation Science and Learning Health Systems: Intersections and Commonalities - Innovating audit and feedback using message tailoring models for learning health systems Zach Landis-Lewis S22 PANEL: Implementation Science and Learning Health Systems: Intersections and Commonalities - Implementation science and learning health systems: Connecting the dots Anne Sales S23 Facilitation activities of Critical Access Hospitals during TeamSTEPPS implementation Jure Baloh, Marcia Ward, Xi Zhu S24 Organizational and social context of federally qualified health centers and variation in maternal depression outcomes Ian Bennett, Jurgen Unutzer, Johnny Mao, Enola Proctor, Mindy Vredevoogd, Ya-Fen Chan, Nathaniel Williams, Phillip Green S25 Decision support to enhance treatment of hospitalized smokers: A randomized trial Steven Bernstein, June-Marie Rosner, Michelle DeWitt, Jeanette Tetrault, James Dziura, Allen Hsiao, Scott Sussman, Patrick O’Connor, Benjamin Toll S26 PANEL: Developing Sustainable Strategies for the Implementation of Patient-Centered Care across Diverse US Healthcare Systems - A patient-centered approach to successful community transition after catastrophic injury Michael Jones, Julie Gassaway S27 PANEL: Developing Sustainable Strategies for the Implementation of Patient-Centered Care across Diverse US Healthcare Systems - Conducting PCOR to integrate mental health and cancer screening services in primary care Jonathan Tobin S28 PANEL: Developing Sustainable Strategies for the Implementation of Patient-Centered Care across Diverse US Healthcare Systems - A comparative effectiveness trial of optimal patient-centered care for US trauma care systems Douglas Zatzick S29 Preferences for in-person communication among patients in a multi-center randomized study of in-person versus telephone communication of genetic test results for cancer susceptibility Angela R Bradbury, Linda Patrick-Miller, Brian Egleston, Olufunmilayo I Olopade, Michael J Hall, Mary B Daly, Linda Fleisher, Generosa Grana, Pamela Ganschow, Dominique Fetzer, Amanda Brandt, Dana Farengo-Clark, Andrea Forman, Rikki S Gaber, Cassandra Gulden, Janice Horte, Jessica Long, Rachelle Lorenz Chambers, Terra Lucas, Shreshtha Madaan, Kristin Mattie, Danielle McKenna, Susan Montgomery, Sarah Nielsen, Jacquelyn Powers, Kim Rainey, Christina Rybak, Michelle Savage, Christina Seelaus, Jessica Stoll, Jill Stopfer, Shirley Yao and Susan Domchek S30 Working towards de-implementation: A mixed methods study in breast cancer surveillance care Erin Hahn, Corrine Munoz-Plaza, Jianjin Wang, Jazmine Garcia Delgadillo, Brian Mittman Michael Gould S31Integrating evidence-based practices for increasing cancer screenings in safety-net primary care systems: A multiple case study using the consolidated framework for implementation research Shuting (Lily) Liang, Michelle C. Kegler, Megan Cotter, Emily Phillips, April Hermstad, Rentonia Morton, Derrick Beasley, Jeremy Martinez, Kara Riehman S32 Observations from implementing an mHealth intervention in an FQHC David Gustafson, Lisa Marsch, Louise Mares, Andrew Quanbeck, Fiona McTavish, Helene McDowell, Randall Brown, Chantelle Thomas, Joseph Glass, Joseph Isham, Dhavan Shah S33 A multicomponent intervention to improve primary care provider adherence to chronic opioid therapy guidelines and reduce opioid misuse: A cluster randomized controlled trial protocol Jane Liebschutz, Karen Lasser S34 Implementing collaborative care for substance use disorders in primary care: Preliminary findings from the summit study Katherine Watkins, Allison Ober, Sarah Hunter, Karen Lamp, Brett Ewing S35 Sustaining a task-shifting strategy for blood pressure control in Ghana: A stakeholder analysis Juliet Iwelunmor, Joyce Gyamfi, Sarah Blackstone, Nana Kofi Quakyi, Jacob Plange-Rhule, Gbenga Ogedegbe S36 Contextual adaptation of the consolidated framework for implementation research (CFIR) in a tobacco cessation study in Vietnam Pritika Kumar, Nancy Van Devanter, Nam Nguyen, Linh Nguyen, Trang Nguyen, Nguyet Phuong, Donna Shelley S37 Evidence check: A knowledge brokering approach to systematic reviews for policy Sian Rudge S38 Using Evidence Synthesis to Strengthen Complex Health Systems in Low- and Middle-Income Countries Etienne Langlois S39 Does it matter: timeliness or accuracy of results? The choice of rapid reviews or systematic reviews to inform decision-making Andrea Tricco S40 Evaluation of the veterans choice program using lean six sigma at a VA medical center to identify benefits and overcome obstacles Sherry Ball, Anne Lambert-Kerzner, Christine Sulc, Carol Simmons, Jeneen Shell-Boyd, Taryn Oestreich, Ashley O'Connor, Emily Neely, Marina McCreight, Amy Labebue, Doreen DiFiore, Diana Brostow, P. Michael Ho, David Aron S41 The influence of local context on multi-stakeholder alliance quality improvement activities: A multiple case study Jillian Harvey, Megan McHugh, Dennis Scanlon S42 Increasing physical activity in early care and education: Sustainability via active garden education (SAGE) Rebecca Lee, Erica Soltero, Nathan Parker, Lorna McNeill, Tracey Ledoux S43 Marking a decade of policy implementation: The successes and continuing challenges of a provincial school food and nutrition policy in Canada Jessie-Lee McIsaac, Kate MacLeod, Nicole Ata, Sherry Jarvis, Sara Kirk S44 Use of research evidence among state legislators who prioritize mental health and substance abuse issues Jonathan Purtle, Elizabeth Dodson, Ross Brownson S45 PANEL: Effectiveness-Implementation Hybrid Designs: Clarifications, Refinements, and Additional Guidance Based on a Systematic Review and Reports from the Field - Hybrid type 1 designs Brian Mittman, Geoffrey Curran S46 PANEL: Effectiveness-Implementation Hybrid Designs: Clarifications, Refinements, and Additional Guidance Based on a Systematic Review and Reports from the Field - Hybrid type 2 designs Geoffrey Curran S47 PANEL: Effectiveness-Implementation Hybrid Designs: Clarifications, Refinements, and Additional Guidance Based on a Systematic Review and Reports from the Field - Hybrid type 3 designs Jeffrey Pyne S48 Linking team level implementation leadership and implementation climate to individual level attitudes, behaviors, and implementation outcomes Gregory Aarons, Mark Ehrhart, Elisa Torres S49 Pinpointing the specific elements of local context that matter most to implementation outcomes: Findings from qualitative comparative analysis in the RE-inspire study of VA acute stroke care Edward Miech S50 The GO score: A new context-sensitive instrument to measure group organization level for providing and improving care Edward Miech S51 A research network approach for boosting implementation and improvement Kathleen Stevens, I.S.R.N. Steering Council S52 PANEL: Qualitative methods in D&I Research: Value, rigor and challenge - The value of qualitative methods in implementation research Alison Hamilton S53 PANEL: Qualitative methods in D&I Research: Value, rigor and challenge - Learning evaluation: The role of qualitative methods in dissemination and implementation research Deborah Cohen S54 PANEL: Qualitative methods in D&I Research: Value, rigor and challenge - Qualitative methods in D&I research Deborah Padgett S55 PANEL: Maps & models: The promise of network science for clinical D&I - Hospital network of sharing patients with acute and chronic diseases in California Alexandra Morshed S56 PANEL: Maps & models: The promise of network science for clinical D&I - The use of social network analysis to identify dissemination targets and enhance D&I research study recruitment for pre-exposure prophylaxis for HIV (PrEP) among men who have sex with men Rupa Patel S57 PANEL: Maps & models: The promise of network science for clinical D&I - Network and organizational factors related to the adoption of patient navigation services among rural breast cancer care providers Beth Prusaczyk S58 A theory of de-implementation based on the theory of healthcare professionals’ behavior and intention (THPBI) and the becker model of unlearning David C. Aron, Divya Gupta, Sherry Ball S59 Observation of registered dietitian nutritionist-patient encounters by dietetic interns highlights low awareness and implementation of evidence-based nutrition practice guidelines Rosa Hand, Jenica Abram, Taylor Wolfram S60 Program sustainability action planning: Building capacity for program sustainability using the program sustainability assessment tool Molly Hastings, Sarah Moreland-Russell S61 A review of D&I study designs in published study protocols Rachel Tabak, Alex Ramsey, Ana Baumann, Emily Kryzer, Katherine Montgomery, Ericka Lewis, Margaret Padek, Byron Powell, Ross Brownson S62 PANEL: Geographic variation in the implementation of public health services: Economic, organizational, and network determinants - Model simulation techniques to estimate the cost of implementing foundational public health services Cezar Brian Mamaril, Glen Mays, Keith Branham, Lava Timsina S63 PANEL: Geographic variation in the implementation of public health services: Economic, organizational, and network determinants - Inter-organizational network effects on the implementation of public health services Glen Mays, Rachel Hogg S64 PANEL: Building capacity for implementation and dissemination of the communities that care prevention system at scale to promote evidence-based practices in behavioral health - Implementation fidelity, coalition functioning, and community prevention system transformation using communities that care Abigail Fagan, Valerie Shapiro, Eric Brown S65 PANEL: Building capacity for implementation and dissemination of the communities that care prevention system at scale to promote evidence-based practices in behavioral health - Expanding capacity for implementation of communities that care at scale using a web-based, video-assisted training system Kevin Haggerty, David Hawkins S66 PANEL: Building capacity for implementation and dissemination of the communities that care prevention system at scale to promote evidence-based practices in behavioral health - Effects of communities that care on reducing youth behavioral health problems Sabrina Oesterle, David Hawkins, Richard Catalano S68 When interventions end: the dynamics of intervention de-adoption and replacement Virginia McKay, M. Margaret Dolcini, Lee Hoffer S69 Results from next-d: can a disease specific health plan reduce incident diabetes development among a national sample of working-age adults with pre-diabetes? Tannaz Moin, Jinnan Li, O. Kenrik Duru, Susan Ettner, Norman Turk, Charles Chan, Abigail Keckhafer, Robert Luchs, Sam Ho, Carol Mangione S70 Implementing smoking cessation interventions in primary care settings (STOP): using the interactive systems framework Peter Selby, Laurie Zawertailo, Nadia Minian, Dolly Balliunas, Rosa Dragonetti, Sarwar Hussain, Julia Lecce S71 Testing the Getting To Outcomes implementation support intervention in prevention-oriented, community-based settings Matthew Chinman, Joie Acosta, Patricia Ebener, Patrick S Malone, Mary Slaughter S72 Examining the reach of a multi-component farmers’ market implementation approach among low-income consumers in an urban context Darcy Freedman, Susan Flocke, Eunlye Lee, Kristen Matlack, Erika Trapl, Punam Ohri-Vachaspati, Morgan Taggart, Elaine Borawski S73 Increasing implementation of evidence-based health promotion practices at large workplaces: The CEOs Challenge Amanda Parrish, Jeffrey Harris, Marlana Kohn, Kristen Hammerback, Becca McMillan, Peggy Hannon S74 A qualitative assessment of barriers to nutrition promotion and obesity prevention in childcare Taren Swindle, Geoffrey Curran, Leanne Whiteside-Mansell, Wendy Ward S75 Documenting institutionalization of a health communication intervention in African American churches Cheryl Holt, Sheri Lou Santos, Erin Tagai, Mary Ann Scheirer, Roxanne Carter, Janice Bowie, Muhiuddin Haider, Jimmie Slade, Min Qi Wang S76 Reduction in hospital utilization by underserved patients through use of a community-medical home Andrew Masica, Gerald Ogola, Candice Berryman, Kathleen Richter S77 Sustainability of evidence-based lay health advisor programs in African American communities: A mixed methods investigation of the National Witness Project Rachel Shelton, Lina Jandorf, Deborah Erwin S78 Predicting the long-term uninsured population and analyzing their gaps in physical access to healthcare in South Carolina Khoa Truong S79 Using an evidence-based parenting intervention in churches to prevent behavioral problems among Filipino youth: A randomized pilot study Joyce R. Javier, Dean Coffey, Sheree M. Schrager, Lawrence Palinkas, Jeanne Miranda S80 Sustainability of elementary school-based health centers in three health-disparate southern communities Veda Johnson, Valerie Hutcherson, Ruth Ellis S81 Childhood obesity prevention partnership in Louisville: creative opportunities to engage families in a multifaceted approach to obesity prevention Anna Kharmats, Sandra Marshall-King, Monica LaPradd, Fannie Fonseca-Becker S82 Improvements in cervical cancer prevention found after implementation of evidence-based Latina prevention care management program Deanna Kepka, Julia Bodson, Echo Warner, Brynn Fowler S83 The OneFlorida data trust: Achieving health equity through research & training capacity building Elizabeth Shenkman, William Hogan, Folakami Odedina, Jessica De Leon, Monica Hooper, Olveen Carrasquillo, Renee Reams, Myra Hurt, Steven Smith, Jose Szapocznik, David Nelson, Prabir Mandal S84 Disseminating and sustaining medical-legal partnerships: Shared value and social return on investment James Teufel
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- 2016
3. Proceedings of the 8th Annual Conference on the Science of Dissemination and Implementation : Washington, DC, USA. 14-15 December 2015.
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Chambers, David, Simpson, Lisa, Hill-Briggs, Felicia, Neta, Gila, Vinson, Cynthia, Beidas, Rinad, Marcus, Steven, Aarons, Gregory, Hoagwood, Kimberly, Schoenwald, Sonja, Evans, Arthur, Hurford, Matthew, Rubin, Ronnie, Hadley, Trevor, Barg, Frances, Walsh, Lucia, Adams, Danielle, Mandell, David, Martin, Lindsey, Mignogna, Joseph, Mott, Juliette, Hundt, Natalie, Kauth, Michael, Kunik, Mark, Naik, Aanand, Cully, Jeffrey, McGuire, Alan, White, Dominique, Bartholomew, Tom, McGrew, John, Luther, Lauren, Rollins, Angie, Salyers, Michelle, Cooper, Brittany, Funaiole, Angie, Richards, Julie, Lee, Amy, Lapham, Gwen, Caldeiro, Ryan, Lozano, Paula, Gildred, Tory, Achtmeyer, Carol, Ludman, Evette, Addis, Megan, Marx, Larry, Bradley, Katharine, VanDeinse, Tonya, Wilson, Amy Blank, Stacey, Burgin, Powell, Byron, Bunger, Alicia, Cuddeback, Gary, Barnett, Miya, Stadnick, Nicole, Brookman-Frazee, Lauren, Lau, Anna, Dorsey, Shannon, Pullmann, Michael, Mitchell, Shannon, Schwartz, Robert, Kirk, Arethusa, Dusek, Kristi, Oros, Marla, Hosler, Colleen, Gryczynski, Jan, Barbosa, Carolina, Dunlap, Laura, Lounsbury, David, O’Grady, Kevin, Brown, Barry, Damschroder, Laura, Waltz, Thomas, Ritchie, Mona, Atkins, David, Imel, Zac E, Xiao, Bo, Can, Doğan, Georgiou, Panayiotis, Narayanan, Shrikanth, Berkel, Cady, Gallo, Carlos, Sandler, Irwin, Brown, C Hendricks, Wolchik, Sharlene, Mauricio, Anne Marie, Mehrotra, Sanjay, Chandurkar, Dharmendra, Bora, Siddhartha, Das, Arup, Tripathi, Anand, Saggurti, Niranjan, Raj, Anita, Hughes, Eric, Jacobs, Brian, and Kirkendall, Eric
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Health Policy & Services ,Information and Computing Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences - Published
- 2016
4. A Program to Discharge Individuals with Long Term Psychiatric Hospitalizations
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Bartholomew, Tom
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- 2018
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5. The Relationship Between Provider Competence, Content Exposure, and Consumer Outcomes in Illness Management and Recovery Programs
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McGuire, Alan B., White, Dominique A., Bartholomew, Tom, Flanagan, Mindy E., McGrew, John H., Rollins, Angela L., Mueser, Kim T., and Salyers, Michelle P.
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- 2017
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6. Illness management and recovery in community practice
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McGuire, Alan B., Roudebush, Richard L., Bartholomew, Tom, University, Rutgers, Anderson, Adrienne I., Bauer, Sarah M., McGrew, John H., White, Dominique A., Luther, Lauren, Rollins, Angela, Pereira, Angela, and Salyers, Michelle P.
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Receipt ,050103 clinical psychology ,Mental Disorders ,05 social sciences ,Rehabilitation ,Motivational interviewing ,PsycINFO ,Mental illness ,medicine.disease ,Health Professions (miscellaneous) ,Article ,Community Mental Health Services ,030227 psychiatry ,03 medical and health sciences ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,0302 clinical medicine ,Nursing ,Illness management ,Action plan ,medicine ,Humans ,Community practice ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Psychology ,Competence (human resources) - Abstract
OBJECTIVE To examine provider competence in providing Illness Management and Recovery (IMR), an evidence-based self-management program for people with severe mental illness, and the association between implementation supports and IMR competence. METHOD IMR session recordings, provided by 43 providers/provider pairs, were analyzed for IMR competence using the IMR Treatment Integrity Scale. Providers also reported on receipt of commonly available implementation supports (e.g., training, consultation). RESULTS Average IMR competence scores were in the "needs improvement" range. Clinicians demonstrated low competence in several IMR elements: significant other involvement, weekly action planning, action plan follow-up, cognitive-behavioral techniques, and behavioral tailoring for medication management. These elements were commonly absent from IMR sessions. Competence in motivational enhancement strategies and cognitive-behavioral techniques differed based on the module topic covered in a session. Generally, receipt of implementation supports was not associated with increased competence; however, motivational interviewing training was associated with increased competence in action planning and review. CONCLUSIONS AND IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE IMR, as implemented in the community, may lack adequate competence and commonly available implementation supports do not appear to be adequate. Additional implementation supports that target clinician growth areas are needed. (PsycINFO Database Record
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- 2016
7. The relationship of attributions about inpatient violence, attitudes about coercive management strategies and exposure to violence
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Bartholomew, Tom
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The attributional theory of help-giving and aggression proposes that attributions about the causes of problematic behaviors in others, can be categorized along a continuum of internality /externality and controllability/non-controllability (Rudolph et al., 2004). Mental health staff who attribute consumers’ violent behavior to internal and controllable factors, collectively known as “responsibility”, have shown increased feelings of anger toward that consumer (Keenan, 2010) and exhibited fewer helping behaviors (Stanley & Standen, 2000). This study used bivariate correlations and multiple regression with data from a cross sectional survey of staff from New Jersey’s three civil state psychiatric hospitals (n=232) to explore the relationships between psychiatric inpatient staff’s exposure to violence, their attributions about responsibility for violence, and their attitudes about coercive interventions to manage violence. Though effect sizes were low, results showed a positive association between staff attributions of consumer responsibility for violence and their belief in the value of coercion to manage violence. Staff’s optimism that patients can change mediated staff’s willingness to provide extra effort to consumers who commit violence. Exposure to violence was not found to be related to either staff attributions of patient responsibility for violence or staff’s beliefs about the value of coercion to manage violence. A discussion of the findings in the context of the literature, limitations of the study, and recommendations for future work are addressed.
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- 2019
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8. Using Recovery-Oriented Principles to Improve Consumer Empowerment in a State Psychiatric Hospital
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Bartholomew, Tom, primary, Gildar, Loren, additional, Carrick, Gwen, additional, Saafigueroa, Angela, additional, and Cook, Ruth, additional
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- 2018
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9. The Relationship Between Provider Competence, Content Exposure, and Consumer Outcomes in Illness Management and Recovery Programs
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McGuire, Alan B., primary, White, Dominique A., additional, Bartholomew, Tom, additional, Flanagan, Mindy E., additional, McGrew, John H., additional, Rollins, Angela L., additional, Mueser, Kim T., additional, and Salyers, Michelle P., additional
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- 2015
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10. The Relationship of Illness Management and Recovery to State Hospital Readmission
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Bartholomew, Tom, primary and Zechner, Michelle, additional
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- 2014
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11. Fidelity to the Structural and Clinical Aspects of the Illness Management and Recovery Program in an Institutional Setting: A 6-Year Study
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Bartholomew, Tom, Zechner, Michelle R., Birkmann, Joseph, Reinhardt-Wood, Dawn L., Kinter, Kenneth, Sperduto, Jennifer, Cook, Ruth, and Giantini, Michael
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ABSTRACT:Illness Management and Recovery (IMR) was implemented and assessed for fidelity in 4 state psychiatric hospitals over a 6-year period. Differences in the assessment of the structural and clinical elements of the practice were evaluated. The scores for the structural aspects of the program started and remained "fully implemented" throughout the 6 years of observation. The scores for the clinical elements of the program started in the "not implemented" range and were only "partially implemented" throughout the 6 years. Three recommendations to improve clinical fidelity scores are (a) composing IMR groups of consumers considering homogeneity of current functioning, (b) identifying IMR facilitators who are motivated to provide the intervention to fidelity, and (c) using an audit and feedback approach (Ivers et al., 2014) with the IMR Treatment Integrity Scale (McGuire et al., 2015) to shape high-fidelity practice. The implications of the study's findings, study limitations, and areas for future research are discussed.
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- 2018
12. Toward a Fidelity Scale for Inpatient Treatment Malls
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Bartholomew, Tom, primary and Cook, Ruth, additional
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- 2013
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13. Assessing the Suitability of Clinical Programs for Implementation.
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Bartholomew, Tom and Birkmann, Joe
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MENTAL health services , *REGIONAL medical programs , *STRATEGIC planning , *COST effectiveness , *HEALTH outcome assessment , *ORGANIZATIONAL commitment - Abstract
Mental health organizations looking to implement new clinical programs are faced with an ever-increasing number of options to choose from. Determining which program(s) to implement is often based on a fondness for "pet programs" and factors such as the availability of vender packages that may have little bearing on the appropriateness of a given program. A nine-dimension rubric is proposed as a way of measuring a program's suitability for implementation. This rubric involves an assessment of a program's: objective(s), efficacy, generalizability, cost benefit profile, opportunity cost(s), fidelity measurement, outcome assessment, feasibility, and three factors related to implementation. These dimensions of suitability are presented as score-able criteria to offer organizations a means to compare and contrast various clinical programs. Programs are scored, ideally first by venders or program advocates, then individually by those charged with making a decision about implementation. Lastly, consensus is sought on scores across the nine-dimension rubric using the measurable anchors. Limitations of this approach are discussed. Future work in this area is recommended. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
14. Illness Management and Recovery in State Psychiatric Hospitals
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Bartholomew, Tom, primary and Kensler, David, additional
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- 2010
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15. A Proposed Time Transfer Experiment Between the USA and the South Pacific
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DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE WASHINGTON DC, Luck, John, Dunkley, John, Armstrong, Tim, Gifford, Al, Landis, Paul, Rasmussen, Scott, Wheeler, Paul, Bartholomew, Tom, Stein, Sam, DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE WASHINGTON DC, Luck, John, Dunkley, John, Armstrong, Tim, Gifford, Al, Landis, Paul, Rasmussen, Scott, Wheeler, Paul, Bartholomew, Tom, and Stein, Sam
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This paper describes the concept, architecture and preliminary details of an experiment directed towards providing continuous Ultra High Precision (UHP) time transfer between Washington, DC; Salisbury, SA Australia; Orroral Valley, ACT Australia; and Lower Hutt, New Zealand. It further describes a proposed method of distributing UTC(USN0) at a high level of precision to passive users over a broad area of the South Pacific. The concept is based on active two-way satellite time transfer from the United States Naval Observatory (USNO) to the proposed USNO Master Clock West (MCW) in Wahiwa, HI USA at the 1 nanosecond level using active satellite two-way time transfer augmented by Precise Positioning Service (PPS) of the Global Positioning System (GPS). MCW would act as an intermediate transfer/reference station, again linked to Salisbury at the 1 nanosecond level using active satellite two-way time transfer augmented by PPS GPS. From this point, time would be distributed within the region by two methods. The first is an existing TV line sync system using an Australian communications satellite (AUSSAT K1) which is useful to the 20 nanosecond level. The second approach is RF ranging and multilateration between Salisbury, Orroral Observatory, Lower Hutt and the AUSSAT B1 and B2 to be launched in 1992. Orroral Observatory will provide precise laser ranging to the AUSSAT B1/B2 retro reflectors which will reduce ephemeris related time transfer errors to below 1 nanosecond. The corrected position will be transmitted by both the time transfer modern and the existing TV line sync dissemination process. Multilateration has the advantage of being an all weather approach and when used with the laser ranging technique will provide a precise measurement of the propagation path delays. This will result in time transfer performance levels on the order of 10 nanoseconds to passive users in both Australia and New Zealand., See also ADA255837. Presented at the Annual Precise Time and Time Interval (PTTI) Applications and Planning Meeting (23rd) held in Pasadena, CA on 3-5 December 1991. Published in the Proceedings of the Annual Precise Time and Time Interval (PTTI) Applications and Planning Meeting (23rd), p351-363, December 1991.
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- 1991
16. Inbox.
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Allison, Noel, Bartholomew, Tom, Evans, David, Mare, Elardus, Rickerby, Allan, Sheppard, Bryan, and Lambert, Anil
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AUTOMOBILES - Published
- 2019
17. Inbox.
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Riordan, Michael, Carusi, John, Bartholomew, Tom, Noto, Frank, Pember, Brett, Anderson, Keith, Bertolini, Mark, Steele, Peter, and Fawkner, Matt
- Subjects
PRESSURE groups ,SPEED limits ,AUTOMOBILE speed ,AUTOMOBILE industry - Abstract
Several letters to the editor are presented in response to articles in previous issues, including an article on the pressure group aussiespeedingfines.com in the December 2013 issue, a letter supporting the 130 kilometers per hour speed campaign and a letter discussing the closure of car maker GM Holden Ltd.
- Published
- 2014
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