Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-vdxz6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-27T19:22:16.606Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

SH+ 360: novel model for scaling up a mental health and psychosocial support programme in humanitarian settings

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 August 2022

Marx R. Leku*
Affiliation:
HealthRight International, Arua, Uganda and New York, USA
Jacqueline N. Ndlovu
Affiliation:
Global Health Section, University of Copenhagen, Denmark
Christine Bourey
Affiliation:
Department of Mental Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, USA
Luke R. Aldridge
Affiliation:
Department of Mental Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, USA
Nawaraj Upadhaya
Affiliation:
HealthRight International, Arua, Uganda and New York, USA
Wietse A. Tol
Affiliation:
HealthRight International, Arua, Uganda and New York, USA; Global Health Section, University of Copenhagen, Denmark; and Department of Mental Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, USA
Jura L. Augustinavicius
Affiliation:
HealthRight International, Arua, Uganda and New York, USA; Department of Mental Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, USA; and School of Population and Global Health, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, McGill University, Canada
*
Correspondence: Marx R. Leku. Email: [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

We explore multi-sectoral integration as a model for scaling up evidence-based mental health and psychosocial support interventions in humanitarian settings. We introduce Self Help Plus 360, designed to support humanitarian partners across different sectors to integrate a psychosocial intervention into their programming and more holistically address population needs.

Type
Commentary
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - NCCreative Common License - ND
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided that no alterations are made and the original article is properly cited. The written permission of Cambridge University Press must be obtained prior to any commercial use and/or adaptation of the article.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Royal College of Psychiatrists

Background

Many evidence-based mental health and psychosocial support (MHPSS) interventions require a substantial clinical workforce that is not typically available in low-resource humanitarian settings; these settings can encompass a range of emergency situations such as armed conflicts and war and disasters triggered by natural, industrial and technological hazards.Reference Tol, Barbui, Galappatti, Silove, Betancourt and Souza1 Current evidence-based interventions for mental and behavioural health problems also tend to focus on a single mental disorder and reach individuals rather than groups. The high resource requirements are a key factor contributing to low levels of implementation of evidence-based MHPSS interventions in low-resource humanitarian settings.Reference Tol, Leku, Lakin, Carswell, Augustinavicius and Adaku2 To address this deficit, psychological interventions that target a wider range of problems including psychological distress more broadly, that can be delivered without a specialised workforce, and that reach larger numbers of people during delivery have been developed and tested.Reference Tol, Augustinavicius, Carswell, Leku, Adaku and Brown3 Building on evidence of benefits, innovative approaches are now needed for scaling up such interventions. In this context, we refer to ‘scaling up’ as ‘deliberate efforts to increase the impact of innovations successfully tested in pilot or experimental projects so as to benefit more people and to foster policy and programme development on a lasting basis’.4

In the field of global mental health, scaling up has historically been implemented vertically (i.e. within government health institutions) and horizontally (i.e. in new contexts). Both the vertical and horizontal type of scale-up aligns with international recommendations of integrating mental health in non-specialised healthcare settings (e.g. primary care), which is an important pathway to scale.5 Multi-sectoral integration is another viable scale-up pathway, which has been underutilised for MHPSS in humanitarian contexts.Reference Bammer, O'Rourke, O'Connell, Neuhauser, Midgley and Klein6 We propose that integration of MHPSS into programmes and sectors outside health represents a complementary pathway to scale, alongside integration of MHPSS with health programmes. Widely used humanitarian consensus guidelines, including the Inter Agency Standing Committee MHPSS guidelines for emergency settings, provide specific recommendations for integrating MHPSS programmes within diverse sectors of humanitarian response. These include food security and nutrition, education, shelter and site planning, and water and sanitation.7 These recommendations are supported by growing recognition of the need to more holistically address population needs in humanitarian settings, given that the well-being of crisis-affected populations is determined by interrelated health and social factors.Reference Greene, Likindikoki, Rees, Bonz, Kaysen and Misinzo8 Multi-sectoral integration requires strong partnerships and collaboration outside traditional siloes.Reference Greene, Likindikoki, Rees, Bonz, Kaysen and Misinzo8 In addition to more comprehensively addressing humanitarian needs, multi-sectoral integration may also facilitate more rapid and widespread scale-up of evidence-based MHPSS interventions within diverse types of existing humanitarian programming, as this provides more opportunities for implementation. An argument for the integration of MHPSS interventions in diverse (non-health) sectors of humanitarian programming rests on the observation that mental health and psychosocial concerns are often tied in complex bidirectional relationships with other humanitarian needs (e.g. protection from violence and livelihoods).Reference Greene, Likindikoki, Rees, Bonz, Kaysen and Misinzo8,Reference Greene, Rees, Likindikoki, Bonz, Joscelyne and Kaysen9 For example, people who experience poverty are at higher risk of common mental disorders, and these common mental disorders in turn elevate the risk of (further) experiences of poverty.Reference Lund10 Addressing these interlinked concerns may result in more sustainable and cost-efficient impacts.

SH+ 360

To exemplify an integration-focused model, we present SH+ 360, a model for scaling up the evidence-based MHPSS intervention called Self Help Plus (SH+). SH+ is a low-intensity guided self-help intervention that provides strategies for managing psychological distress and coping with adversity broadly.Reference Tol, Leku, Lakin, Carswell, Augustinavicius and Adaku2,Reference Riello, Purgato, Bove, Tedeschi, MacTaggart and Barbui11 SH+ has been tested in different contexts, including among South Sudanese refugee adult women, and is currently being tested among South Sudanese refugee men in Uganda.Reference Tol, Leku, Lakin, Carswell, Augustinavicius and Adaku2 Other studies in Europe and Turkey have tested SH+ with refugees and asylum seekers from various backgrounds.Reference Purgato, Carswell, Tedeschi, Acarturk, Anttila and Au12,Reference Acarturk, Uygun, Ilkkursun, Carswell, Tedeschi and Batu13 Progressions and challenges from piloting to scaling have been described elsewhere.Reference Beets, von Klinggraeff, Weaver, Armstrong and Burkart14,Reference Yamey15 The major challenges specific to SH+ 360 delivery include quality control in training, supervision, and monitoring and evaluation; these are described in the SH+ 360 model component section.

Development of SH+ 360

Our approach to bringing SH+ to scale has undergone multiple iterations. Initially, we proposed scaling up SH+ through a more conventional model, that is, expanding the training and implementation workforce of HealthRight International that tested the intervention in-country. Through reflection, stakeholder consultation and iterative development, our model evolved into SH+ 360, which in its present form centres around the creation of a technical support hub. We now intend to scale up SH+ through a model of tailored support (SH+ 360) that will facilitate the integration of SH+ into routine programming of selected partners operating at scale across diverse humanitarian sectors (i.e. multi-sectoral integration). Under SH+ 360, HealthRight International will not directly deliver SH+ but will support humanitarian partners as they integrate core model components into their own existing humanitarian programming to ensure ownership and sustainability of implementation.

SH+ 360 model components

The core components of SH+ 360 (Fig. 1) align with the programme cycle, beginning with completing an assessment of needs and resources with partner organisations. This needs and resources assessment enables both HealthRight International and partner organisations to understand (a) how SH+ may be adapted to meet unique population needs and (b) how SH+ could be embedded into specific services and training programmes that are already being delivered by partner organisations. The SH+ format was intended to be generic; adapting the intervention for implementation in new sociocultural contexts is critical. HealthRight International will support partners in translating and adapting SH+ according to their needs and help to identify non-specialists within their organisations that can be trained to serve as SH+ facilitators. Using a digital mental health support assessment for MHPSS called Ensuring Quality in Psychological Support, the skills of non-specialists facilitating SH+ delivery can be assessed before, during and after a training programme to ensure quality delivery.16 As people experiencing mild to moderate forms of psychological distress benefit most from SH+, those experiencing more severe psychological distress should be immediately referred for specialised services. Thus, HealthRight International will support partners in developing recruitment, screening and referral procedures. Each partner organisation will then implement SH+, with support from HealthRight International. One major challenge that we foresee that is specific to scaling SH+ is quality control, as we will be training other organisations to implement SH+. To mitigate this challenge, we aim to co-design an SH+-specific monitoring and evaluation subsystem that can be added into partner organisation's existing systems, making it possible to track key indicators and maintain quality at each level of SH+ implementation. Indicators will reflect outcomes, outputs and processes ascertained from SH+ participants, facilitators and programme records and will be jointly analysed.

Fig. 1 SH+ 360 core components align with the programme cycle. The planning phase corresponds to needs assessment, translation, and adaptation and training. The implementation phase corresponds to implementing SH+, and the evaluation phase corresponds to the monitoring and evaluation component. NGO, non-governmental organisation.

SH+ 360 application and testing

Approaches to scaling up need to be tested before they are implemented broadly.Reference Schafer, Harper-Shehadeh, Carswell, van't Hof, Hall and Malik17 SH+ 360 will be tested in Uganda through initial integration of SH+ into existing health programmes currently delivered by one partner and into gender-based violence, reproductive health, peaceful coexistence and livelihoods programmes currently delivered by another partner. HealthRight International will manage the SH+ 360 technical support hub that will support integration and implementation. Application and testing of the SH+ 360 model of scaling up can be understood through operational, implementation and financial elements.

Operational component of SH+ 360

The operational component of a scale-up model is a key feature that guides planning, implementation and learning and enables successful scaling up of interventions.Reference Bachmann and Liu18 As multi-sectoral integration requires strong partnerships and collaboration outside traditional siloes,Reference Greene, Likindikoki, Rees, Bonz, Kaysen and Misinzo8 the operational component of the SH+ 360 model relies heavily on developing and maintaining strong partnerships between organisations. The goal of each partnership is to scale up SH+ delivery and reach new populations by developing partner internal capacity to deliver SH+ fully and independently, with a high level of quality, to meet the mental health and psychosocial needs of specific populations, drawing on HealthRight International's extensive experience with SH+ implementation and evaluation. HealthRight International will provide leadership, mentoring and tailored technical support to build the capacity of partner organisations to deliver SH+ to specific target populations in particular implementation contexts. Technical support under SH+ 360 is intended to be short term and time bound. This operational model, focused on knowledge-sharing to embed SH+ delivery within diverse ongoing humanitarian programmes within a variety of organisations, is intended to support sustainable delivery over the longer term. Anticipated challenges related to partnerships include working with different partners who have a range of organisational priorities and who may not be used to delivering MHPSS. To mitigate partnership challenges, co-development and partner ownership over integration and implementation are important components of the SH+ 360 model. Findings from the initial testing of the SH+ 360 model will inform future partnership-building processes and will provide a blueprint for co-creating implementation plans with partners in the future.

Implementation component of SH+ 360

The implementation component of a scale-up model refers to the application of a clear sequence of activities needed to take interventions to scale.Reference Barker, Reid and Schall19 For the SH+ 360 model, implementation refers to the steps required to successfully integrate and deliver SH+ with existing health and non-health programming of partner organisations. This integration pathway to scale expands an intervention in terms of the breadth of populations and/or geographic locations reached (i.e. ‘scaling out’). For example, we intend to test SH+ 360 with two partners working in diverse sectors and with diverse populations who are already engaged in these programmes. Successful integration will therefore likely require translation or adaptation of intervention content or implementation procedures for SH+. Partners’ procedures for implementing existing interventions may also require adaptation. We aim to assess how integration will ensure that positive outcomes from both programmes are maintained and that the integrated version of the programmes is feasible to deliver. Some challenges that we anticipate in partner implementation of SH+ under SH+ 360 include mobilising participants for group delivery, identifying referral pathways for people who need specialised mental healthcare, identifying space to run SH+ sessions and working with a dynamic refugee population that is mobile. Some of the mitigation measures we have successfully employed in the past, and will continue to use, include engaging with and involving community gatekeepers such as refugee leaders and community advisory boards to facilitate mobilisation of participants and using existing spaces within settlements to address space constraints. Through use of SH+ 360 with different partners, we will be able to test various aspects of implementation; identify commonalities and differences across implementing contexts, populations and organisations; and build an evidence base for (multi-sectoral) integration as a pathway to scale in the context of real-world programming.

Financial component of SH+ 360

The financial component of a scale-up model is a framework for generating and sustaining funding to support the journey to scale.Reference Schaffer, Drieschner and Krcmar20 The financial component includes identifying funding sources and describing the impact and financial implications of activities over time. Traditionally, approaches to funding and programming in the humanitarian sector include: (a) a dependency of implementing agencies on humanitarian donors; (b) a separation of humanitarian versus development aid; and (c) funds being provided for implementation rather than to support core functions of a humanitarian organisation.Reference Willitts-King and Spencer21,Reference Ryfman22 The SH+ 360 model requires start-up funding that covers consultancy-type support from HealthRight International and support for co-design and implementation activities for partner organisations. In the present case of SH+ 360, funding and other resources to support participation in the model by HealthRight International and partner organisations are drawn from an SH+ 360-focused grant held by HealthRight International with subcontracts to partner organisations and in-kind contributions to the project (e.g. through staff time, existing materials and resources), thereby leveraging existing resources and minimising the cost of integrating SH+ into existing programming.

In the future, the SH+ 360 financial model will include start-up costs in joint applications with humanitarian agencies (e.g. as part of consolidated appeals). We have strategically partnered with an international non-governmental organisation already operating at scale not only in Uganda but in other parts of the world. We envision that once we integrate SH+ within their programming and it proves to be beneficial, our current partner and subsequent humanitarian organisations will be motivated to include SH+ costs in their own fundraising efforts. Integrating SH+ into the standard MHPSS toolkit of large humanitarian organisations operating at scale will facilitate sustained funding for the implementation of SH+ after the scale-up phase, particularly as large organisations may have access to funding from diverse sources, in contrast to smaller organisations specifically focused on MHPSS. Another approach to ensure financial sustainability that we are employing with our government partner is to work together in adapting SH+ to fit their context within government structures. The World Health Organization's report on sustainable mental healthcare after emergencies also recommends integrating humanitarian programming into standard mental health budgets.23 We are also using the training of trainers model to build SH+ master trainer capabilities among government staff to ensure that they are able to continue training SH+ facilitators across the country after the project ends.

Future directions

Few MHPSS interventions in humanitarian settings have been successfully scaled up, and innovative approaches to scale are needed to address this implementation gap. Multi-sectoral integration with health and non-health programmes represents a promising opportunity to enhance the reach of evidence-based interventions while meeting diverse needs more comprehensively. With limited practical guidance on the steps required to prepare for and implement scalable MHPSS interventions such as SH+, the SH+ 360 model represents a novel platform for knowledge-sharing, co-design and supported uptake. Initial tests of the SH+ 360 model will offer key insight into partnership development, barriers and facilitators to integration, as well as various implementation factors when SH+ is delivered within real-world humanitarian programming.

Data availability

N/A

Author contributions

J.L.A. and W.A.T. conceptualised the SH+ 360 model with support from M.R.L., L.R.A. and C.B. M.R.L. and J.N.N. developed an outline of the manuscript. M.R.L. developed an initial draft of the manuscript in close collaboration with J.N.N. and J.L.A. All authors contributed to revising the manuscript and approved the submitted version of the manuscript.

Funding

This work is supported by the Humanitarian Innovation Fund, managed by ELRHA (grant number 66394). At the time of model development, C.B. and L.R.A. were supported by a T32 training grant in Global Mental Health from the National Institute of Mental Health (#T32MH103210; principal investigator: Judith K. Bass). L.R.A. was supported during manuscript preparation by a T32 training grant in Mental Health Services and Systems from the National Institute of Mental Health (#T32MH109436; principal investigators: Emma Elizabeth McGinty and Elizabeth A. Stuart).

Declaration of interest

None.

Footnotes

*

Joint first authors.

**

Joint last authors.

References

Tol, WA, Barbui, C, Galappatti, A, Silove, D, Betancourt, TS, Souza, R, et al. Mental health and psychosocial support in humanitarian settings: linking practice and research. Lancet 2011; 378(9802): 1581–91.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Tol, WA, Leku, MR, Lakin, DP, Carswell, K, Augustinavicius, J, Adaku, A, et al. Guided self-help to reduce psychological distress in South Sudanese female refugees in Uganda: a cluster randomised trial. Lancet Glob Health 2020; 8(2): e254–63.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Tol, WA, Augustinavicius, J, Carswell, K, Leku, MR, Adaku, A, Brown, FL, et al. Feasibility of a guided self-help intervention to reduce psychological distress in South Sudanese refugee women in Uganda. World Psychiatry 2018; 17(2): 234–5.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
ExpandNet. Scaling-up. ExpandNet, 2021 (https://expandnet.net/scaling-up-definition/).Google Scholar
World Health Organization. mhGAP Intervention Guide. WHO, 2019.Google Scholar
Bammer, G, O'Rourke, M, O'Connell, D, Neuhauser, L, Midgley, G, Klein, JT, et al. Expertise in research integration and implementation for tackling complex problems: when is it needed, where can it be found and how can it be strengthened? Palgrave Commun 2020; 6(1): 116.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Inter-Agency Standing Committee. IASC Guidelines on Mental Health and Psychosocial Support in Emergency Settings. IASC, 2007.Google Scholar
Greene, MC, Likindikoki, S, Rees, S, Bonz, A, Kaysen, D, Misinzo, L, et al. Evaluation of an integrated intervention to reduce psychological distress and intimate partner violence in refugees: results from the Nguvu cluster randomized feasibility trial. PLoS One 2021; 16(6): e0252982.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Greene, MC, Rees, S, Likindikoki, S, Bonz, AG, Joscelyne, A, Kaysen, D, et al. Developing an integrated intervention to address intimate partner violence and psychological distress in Congolese refugee women in Tanzania. Confl Health 2019; 13(1): 38.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lund, C. Poverty and mental health: a review of practice and policies. Neuropsychiatry 2012; 2: 213–9.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Riello, M, Purgato, M, Bove, C, Tedeschi, F, MacTaggart, D, Barbui, C, et al. Effectiveness of self-help plus (SH+) in reducing anxiety and post-traumatic symptomatology among care home workers during the COVID-19 pandemic: a randomized controlled trial. R Soc Open Sci 2021; 8(11): 210219.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Purgato, M, Carswell, K, Tedeschi, F, Acarturk, C, Anttila, M, Au, T, et al. Effectiveness of self-help plus in preventing mental disorders in refugees and asylum seekers in Western Europe: a multinational randomized controlled trial. PPS 2021; 90(6): 403–14.Google ScholarPubMed
Acarturk, C, Uygun, E, Ilkkursun, Z, Carswell, K, Tedeschi, F, Batu, M, et al. Effectiveness of a WHO self-help psychological intervention for preventing mental disorders among Syrian refugees in Turkey: a randomized controlled trial. World Psychiatry 2022; 21(1): 8895.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Beets, MW, von Klinggraeff, L, Weaver, RG, Armstrong, B, Burkart, S. Small studies, big decisions: the role of pilot/feasibility studies in incremental science and premature scale-up of behavioral interventions. Pilot Feasibility Stud 2021; 7(1): 173.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Yamey, G. What are the barriers to scaling up health interventions in low and middle income countries? A qualitative study of academic leaders in implementation science. Global Health 2012; 8(1): 11.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
World Health Organization. EQUIP: Ensuring Quality in Psychological Support. WHO, 2020.Google Scholar
Schafer, A, Harper-Shehadeh, M, Carswell, K, van't Hof, E, Hall, J, Malik, A, et al. Scalable Psychological Interventions for People Affected by Adversity. Humanitarian Practice Network (HPN), 2018 (https://odihpn.org/publication/scalable-psychological-interventions-for-people-affected-by-adversity/).Google Scholar
Bachmann, J, Liu, JM. Scale-up Operating Model Series: Uncovering the Secret Sauce behind European Growth Companies. Tech.eu, 2020 (https://tech.eu/features/33960/startup-operating-models-uncovering-the-secret-sauce-behind-european-growth-companies/).Google Scholar
Barker, PM, Reid, A, Schall, MW. A framework for scaling up health interventions: lessons from large-scale improvement initiatives in Africa. Implement Sci 2016; 11(1): 12.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Schaffer, N, Drieschner, C, Krcmar, H. An Analysis of Business Model Component Interrelations. PACIS 2020 Proceedings, 2020.Google Scholar
Willitts-King, B, Spencer, A. Reducing the Humanitarian Financing Gap: Review of Progress since the Report of the High-Level Panel on Humanitarian Financing. ODI, 2021 (https://odi.org/en/publications/reducing-the-humanitarian-financing-gap-review-of-progress-since-the-report-of-the-high-level-panel-on-humanitarian-financing/).Google Scholar
Ryfman, P. Non-governmental organizations: an indispensable player of humanitarian aid. Int Rev Red Cross 2007; 89(865): 2146.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
World Health Organization. Building Back Better: Sustainable Mental Health Care After Emergencies. Overview. WHO, 2013.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Fig. 1 SH+ 360 core components align with the programme cycle. The planning phase corresponds to needs assessment, translation, and adaptation and training. The implementation phase corresponds to implementing SH+, and the evaluation phase corresponds to the monitoring and evaluation component. NGO, non-governmental organisation.

Submit a response

eLetters

No eLetters have been published for this article.