Abstract
Measurement-based care has demonstrable benefits, but significant implementation barriers slow dissemination in real-world clinical settings, especially youth behavioral health care. Here, we describe use of measurement-based care in a specialty clinic offering a continuum of outpatient care for suicidal youth. We characterize strategies used to facilitate measurement-based care in this population and ways in which challenges to implementation have been addressed. We examined adherence to measurement-based care procedures relative to treatment engagement data from electronic medical records, as well as data from clinicians regarding acceptability and utility of measurement-based care. Results suggest that measurement-based care is both feasible and acceptable for use with suicidal youth. Here we provide future directions in measurement-based care in this, and other, behavioral health settings. Copyright:
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CITATION STYLE
Victor, S. E., Salk, R. H., Porta, G., Hamilton, E., Bero, K., Poling, K., … Goldstein, T. R. (2023). Measurement-based care for suicidal youth: Outcomes and recommendations from the Services for Teens at Risk (STAR) Center. PLoS ONE, 18(4 April). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0284073
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