Title: Cultural Competence and EvidenceBased Practices: Implications for Action
1Cultural Competence and Evidence-Based
PracticesImplications for Action
Vijay Ganju, Ph.D. Director, Center for Mental
Health Quality and Accountability NASMHPD
Research Institute, Inc. Phone (703) 739-9333,
ext. 132 Email vijay.ganju_at_nri-inc.org
- Presentation at the conference on
- Balancing Evidence Cultural Competency and
Evidence-Based Practices - Seattle, Washington ? December 6, 2005
2- Even more than other areas of health and
medicine, the mental health field is plagued by
disparities in the availability of and access to
its services. These disparities are viewed
readily through the lenses of racial and cultural
diversity, age, and gender.
Surgeon General David Satcher, M.D., Ph.D. in
Mental Health A Report of the Surgeon General
(DHHS, 1999, p.vi.).
3What Are Mental Health Disparities?
- Access
- Availability
- Utilization
- Quality of Care
- Research and Data
4Selected Performance Measures by
Ethnicity(Five-State Feasibility Study, 1997)
5Patterns in Cause of Death by Minority Group, 1992
? Indicates higher death rate than for whites
Source National Center for Health Statistics,
1994. From Nickens, HW The Role of
Race/Ethnicity and Social Class in Minority
Health Status, Health Services Research, 30 (1)
156, 1995
6Benefits of Cultural Competence in Healthcare
Improved Health Outcomes
Maximal Use of Limited Resources
Increased Customer Retention and Access to Care
Increased Customer Recruitment Increased
Customer Satisfaction
Provide Products and Services Consistent with
Client Needs
Culturally Competent Management, Staff and
Practitioners
(Adapted from American Association of Health
Plans, Minority Management Program, 1997)
7Rationale for Cultural Competence
- Cultural Competence Quality of Care
- Cultural Competence Disparity Reduction
- Cultural Competence Risk Management
- Cultural Competence Parity (within MH system)
- Cultural Competence Linguistic Competence
- Cultural Competence A Fundamental Social
- Responsibility
8What are Evidence-Based Practices?
- Evidence-based practices refer to services and
programs that have been shown to be effective
using the highest standards of scientific proof. - NOTE Only a few mental health services and
programs meet this high standard
9Evidence-Based PracticesSelect Definitions
- An evidence-based practice is considered to be
any practice that has been established as
effective through scientific research according
to a set of explicit criteria (Drake, et al,
2001) - Evidence-based treatment is the use of treatments
for which there is sufficiently persuasive
evidence to support their effectiveness in
attaining desired outcomes (Rosen and Proctor,
2002) - Evidence-based practice is an approach to make
clinical decisions for individual patients
(McKibbon, 1998) - Evidence-based practice is the integration of
best research evidence with clinical expertise
and patient values (Institute of Medicine, 2001)
10Levels of Evidence
- Level I Randomized control trials
- Level II
- Well designed trials without randomization
- Cohort or case control, preferably multi-site
- Multiple time series with or without
intervention - Level III Opinions of respected authorities
based on clinical experience, descriptive
studies, case reports
11The Quality Pyramid
Quality Improvement
Evidence-based Practices
Performance Measurement
12Evidence-Based PracticesExamples
13Evidence-Based PracticesExamples, Contd
14SAMHSAs New Implementation Resource Kits for
EBPs and Promising Practices
- Supported Housing
- Consumer-Operated Services
- Older Adults
- Children and Adolescents
15Promising Other Practices that are Effective but
Lack Strong Evidentiary Base
- Consumer-operated services
- Jail diversion and community re-entry programs
- School mental health services
- Trauma-specific interventions
- Wraparound services for children
16Example of Benefits of EBPs Related to Crime
Reduction
17Public Mental Health Authority
- Leadership
- Policies
- Regulation
- Resources
Provider Organization
- Leadership
- Organizational Culture
- Administrative Support
- Information Technology
- EBP
- Cost
- Compatibility
- Payoffs
- Complexity
- Practitioner
- Knowledge
- Perceived advantage
- Feedback
- Consumer/Family Member
- Choice
- Commitment
- Perceived Advantage
18Factors Affecting State-Wide EBP Implementation
- System leadership
- Organizational culture/consensus
- IT capacity/outcomes measurement
- Policies/procedures
- Integration with performance/quality improvement
- Human resource capacity/training
- Funding methods
19EBP Implementation The Need for an
Outcomes-Based QI and Recovery Framework
- EBP implementation must occur within a
person-based, recovery/resilience, and culturally
competent framework - Implementation of evidence-based practices
requires outcomes data at the clinical level - EBP implementation has to occur within a quality
improvement framework
20Consensus Statement of Evidence-Based Programs
and Cultural Competence
- Evidence exists that shows that specific programs
are effective for specific populations in
specific settings - Helpful practices exist for which evidence has
not been fully established - Little research on EBPs has been conducted on
diverse populations - Within this limitation, existing data suggest
that there are no significant differences in
outcomes across different racial, ethnic, or
cultural groups - Implementation of EBPs depends on adequate
infrastructure - Emergent research suggests that adaptations can
be made for specific populations
21Consensus Statement (contd)Recommendations
- Investigate differences in outcomes
- Investigate factors that contribute to consumer
and practitioner access - Investigate the critical system, infrastructure,
and knowledge transfer components related to
successful EBP implementation - Develop new models of research
- Understand relationships of community
infrastructure to resilience and recovery - Develop curricula of training and professional
programs that include cultural aspects and
differences - Provide resources to develop and increase
workforce capacity to effectively implement
appropriate interventions
22Cultural Competence and EBPsCommon Features
- Similar goals - improved quality, improved
outcomes - Require individual development
- Require organizational development (leadership,
data collection, infrastructure, resources) - Fuzzy concepts (different definitions,
concepts, etc.)
23Cultural Concerns Regarding EBPs
24Approaches to Reflecting Cultural Competence
- Measure outcomes for each race/ethnicity/
cultural group (e.g. California) - Adapt evidence-based practices for specific
ethnicity/cultural group (e.g. Hawaii, Los
Angeles) - Expand definition of evidence to include
culture-specific interventions (e.g. Oregon)