Abstract

Youth mental health challenges in the United States continue to escalate at an alarming rate. To address this crisis, there is an urgent need to develop innovative strategies for delivering effective mental health care to youth. The aim of this study was to assess the need and acceptability of a youth mental health mentoring model for adolescents engaged in outpatient mental health services. Participants included adolescents currently engaged in outpatient mental health services (n = 3, 14–17 years old; 66 % Black; 100 % cisgender boys), parents/guardians of adolescents currently engaged in mental health services (n = 4; 50 % Black; 100 % cisgender women), clinicians who provide adolescent mental health services in an outpatient setting (n = 5; 100 % White cisgender women), and potential paraprofessional mental health mentors recruited from a large land-grant University (n = 5; 40 % White; 60 % cisgender women). All participants were recruited from an urban setting in the midwestern United States. Data collection occurred remotely. Following protocols that were approved by an Institutional Review Board, participant groups were provided an overview of the proposed model and asked a series of open-ended questions in four separate focus groups to gauge the perceived need and acceptability of this type of program model. Thematic data analysis was used to analyze data. Across participant groups, results indicated a clear need for supplemental mental health services and high acceptability of the proposed youth mental health mentoring model. Participants offered specific recommendations for model development, especially related to mentor selection, training and supervision.

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