Abstract

Background: Children with chronic physical health conditions are up to six times more likely to develop a mental health condition than their physically well peers. Frontline pediatric hospital staff are in a good position to identify mental health problems and facilitate appropriate support for patients. To date, no evaluation of mental health literacy training has taken place with this professional group to enable early identification of difficulties. It is also not known whether face-to-face or digital training is more effective or preferable in this setting. To improve the skills of frontline hospital staff, a face-to-face and digital mental health literacy training course was delivered using MindEd content and evaluated in a randomized controlled trial.Method: Two-hundred and three frontline staff across different professions from a tertiary pediatric hospital were randomized to a face-to-face (n = 64), digital (n = 71), or waitlist control group (n = 68). Face-to-face training was two and a half hours and digital training took ~1 h. The effects of training were evaluated pre- and post-training and at two-week follow-up. Questionnaires assessed mental health knowledge, stigma, confidence in recognizing concerns and knowing what to do, actual helping behavior, as well as training delivery preference, completion rate, and satisfaction.Results: Both face-to-face and digital training increased mental health knowledge, confidence in recognizing mental health problems and knowing what to do compared to waitlist controls. Digital training increased actual helping behavior relative to the waitlist controls and stigma decreased across all groups. Staff were satisfied with both delivery methods but preferred face-to-face training.Conclusions: The results provide promising findings that digital content is an effective way of improving mental health literacy in frontline pediatric hospital staff. Providing digital training could be a time-efficient way of upskilling non-mental health professionals to identify mental health needs in a pediatric population and facilitate access to appropriate care.

Highlights

  • Mental health problems in children and young people are common but only a minority receive specialist mental health support [1]

  • Despite the importance of recognition of mental health problems in young people with chronic illness, 42% of practice nurses reported that they had no mental health training at all and 82% reported they felt ill-equipped to deal with aspects of mental health for which they are responsible [8]. These findings indicate an urgent need to improve mental health literacy for those working in pediatric settings

  • The aim of the current study was to examine the impact of child mental health literacy training in frontline pediatric hospital staff who have regular contact with young people

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Summary

Introduction

Mental health problems in children and young people are common but only a minority receive specialist mental health support [1]. Many pediatric services have dedicated psychology support, for referrals made to Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services only a small minority mention chronic illness [6] indicating the need for improved recognition of mental health problems in young people with chronic illness. Such improved recognition would facilitate early intervention and associated benefits in terms of clinical outcomes [7]. No evaluation of mental health literacy training has taken place with this professional group to enable early identification of difficulties It is not known whether face-to-face or digital training is more effective or preferable in this setting. To improve the skills of frontline hospital staff, a face-to-face and digital mental health literacy training course was delivered using MindEd content and evaluated in a randomized controlled trial

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