Developing effective strategies to keep health care providers' practice current with best practice guidelines has proven to be challenging. This trial was conducted to determine the potential for using brief educational sessions to generate significant change in physician delivery of mental health and substance use interventions in primary care. A 1-hour educational session outlining interventions for depression and risky alcohol use was delivered to a sample of 85 family physicians. The interventions used a supported self-management approach and included free patient access to appropriate self- management resources. The study initially evaluated physicians' implementation of these interventions over a 2-month period. Physician uptake of the depression intervention was significantly greater than uptake of the risky-drinking intervention (32% versus 10%). A follow-up at 6-months posttraining (depression intervention only) demonstrated fairly good maintenance of intervention delivery. Implications of these findings are discussed.
CITATION STYLE
Bilsker, D., Anderson, J., Samra, J., Goldner, E., & David, S. (2008). Behavioural interventions in primary care: An implementation trial. Canadian Journal of Community Mental Health, 27(2), 179–189. https://doi.org/10.7870/cjcmh-2008-0027
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