Abstract

Leonard Bickman’s (2020) Festschrift paper in the special issue “The Future of Children’s Mental Health Services” on improving mental health services is an impressive reflection of his career, highlighting his major insights and the development of mental health services research as a whole. Five major difficulties in this field’s current research and practice are attentively delineated: poor diagnostics, measurement problems, disadvantages of randomized controlled trials (RCTs), lack of feedback and personalized treatments. Dr. Bickman recommends possible solutions based on his extensive experience and empirical findings. We agree with his thoughts and illustrate how we, challenged with the same problems, have attempted to develop clinically informed research and evidence-based clinical practice. A comprehensive feedback system that deals with the aforementioned problems is briefly described. It includes pre-treatment recommendations for treatment strategies and an empirically informed dropout prediction based on a variety of data sources. In addition to treatment recommendations, continuous feedback as well as individualized treatment adaptation tools are provided during ongoing therapy. New projects are being implemented to further improve the system by including new data assessment strategies and sources, e.g., ecological momentary assessment (EMA) and automated video analysis.

Highlights

  • It is an honor to comment on Leonard Bickman’s (2020) Festschrift paper in the special issue “The Future of Children’s Mental Health Services”

  • Administration and Policy in Mental Health and Mental Health Services Research (2020) 47:856–861 measures with video data from our research clinic, we have found that clinical impression and patient self-report do not always match

  • Developments in the field of evidence-based personalized treatments aim to change how psychotherapy is conducted. These developments confront some of the main limitations in mental health services very accurately identified and described in Dr Bickman’s manuscript

Read more

Summary

Introduction

It is an honor to comment on Leonard Bickman’s (2020) Festschrift paper in the special issue “The Future of Children’s Mental Health Services”. Interesting new approaches to outcome monitoring and precision mental health based on predictions using new statistical tools from artificial intelligence (AI) are suggested to overcome these limitations. The author presents several approaches to examine and implement feedback into clinical practice and highlights the utility of web- and mobile device-based solutions.

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call