SLIDE 1
Integra(ng the Evidence into an Evolving System of Care: Oregon’s Experience
Tamara Sale, Director, EASA Center for Excellence
SLIDE 2 Unprecedented opportunity
- We have the poten=al to achieve a series of major
break-throughs in care throughout the west coast (and across the country and world).
- Well-aligned efforts building on lived experience and
community perspec=ves, and carefully considered research will get us there faster.
- Oregon, California and New York are well-posi=oned to
be catalysts.
SLIDE 3 Integra=ng the Evidence into an Evolving System of Care
- Quick introduc=on to how Oregon has
evolved
- How Oregon has used a shared context and
framework to move forward more rapidly toward a new standard of care
- Reflec=ons on integra=on of research into
community implementa=on: cau=ons and
- pportuni=es
- Opportuni=es for share for ac=on
SLIDE 4 Integra=ng the Evidence into an Evolving System of Care
- Oregon is not California but we both care about
young people and families!
- How Oregon created a shared context and
framework a new standard of care
- How EASA is informed by research and how a
community-based perspec=ve changes the way we think about research
- Where we are going from here: common
- pportuni=es and challenges
SLIDE 5 A Quick comparison
- 4 million people
- 40 people/square mile
- 22.6% under 18
- 12.7% Hispanic/La=no
- 4.4% Asian
- 2.1 Black/African American
- 9.9% born in foreign country
- Suicide rate 15.9/100,000
- 38.8 million people
- 237 people/square mile
- 23.3% under 18
- 38.8% Hispanic/La=no
- 14.7% Asian
- 6.5% Black/African American
- 38% “White alone”/not Hispanic
- 27% born in foreign country
- Suicide rate 9.4/100,000
SLIDE 6 Something we Share (the proposed state of Jefferson)
Source of image: Wikipedia
SLIDE 7 Other things we share
- The wine industry
- Our property tax
limit measure
marijuana
poli=cs”
SLIDE 8 EASA Timeline
- 1997 Oregon Health Plan
- 1999 Researcher hired (Australia)
- 2001 5-county program
- 2006 Itera=ve development
- 2007 Entered research: EDIPPP
- 2007 Statewide dissemina=on
- 2010 RAISE Early Treatment Program (Lane County)
- 2013 EASA Center for Excellence
- 2014 PEPPNET; Congressional ac=on
SLIDE 9
Early Assessment and Support Alliance (EASA)
2001 2008
2010-14 2016-17
2014
2016 2014-16
SLIDE 10
How Oregon has Conceptualized Early Psychosis Services
Goal: Early universal access and most effec=ve and empowering care Early psychosis programs as agents of change Alignment of leadership, funding Developmental framework (system, clinician, individual) Facilita=on of rapid adop=on of effec=ve prac=ces Individuals and families as owners
SLIDE 11 Leveraging change in Oregon
eligibility (with flex), structure
- Common prac=ces and learning
process
- Guidelines & fidelity
- Ongoing training & forums
- Data system
- Website www.easacommunity.org
- Forums for problem solving &
program development
SLIDE 12 EASA
- Guided by lived experience and core philosophy
- Goal is long-term system change
- Integra=on of research and evidence-based prac=ce
- DUP research
- SAMHSA “Toolkit”:
- Individualized Placement and Support
- ACT
- Dual diagnosis
- IMR (rela=onship to IRT)
- Low-dose prescribing; shared decision making
- CBT
- MI
- Feedback-informed treatment
- Occupa=onal therapy
- Peer support
- Nursing
- Family psychoeduca=on (group and individual)
SLIDE 13
Lived Experience: Philosophy; goal refinement; feedback; language; direc=on Research: Goal refinement (qualita=ve, DUP, etc.); rela=ve efficacy (RCT); emerging research, consensus (Delphi) Organiza>onal: Developmental goals; process evalua=on; quality improvement CBPR
SLIDE 14 Research transla=on: what we look for changes how we see the evidence
- Symptom remission
- Dura=on of “untreated” psychosis
- “Preven=ng” schizophrenia
- “Func=oning”
- Developmental progression, locus of control and iden=ty
- Par=cipatory decision making and empowerment
- Social determinants:
- Social network
- Income level and income security: safety net, educa=on, voca=on
- Access to basic needs: housing, transporta=on, nutri=on, safety
- Belonging and social par=cipa=on
SLIDE 15 Integra=ng the Evidence
- “Coordinated specialty care” is
hybrid of mul=ple prac=ces & fields
- Significant problems need work:
metabolic disorder, developmental progression, sustainability
- Need to build our own evidence and
consensus
SLIDE 16 On the verge of mul=ple breakthroughs
- Earlier and more accurate engagement
- Understanding cogni=ve and sensory
underlays
- Bener understanding of the
phenomenology of psychosis (biological, experien=al)
- Systema=c workforce development
- Mul=ple emerging treatment methods
- System of care approaches focused on
developmental progression and mul=ple life domains
- Voca=onal and career support
approaches
SLIDE 17 Evidence-based prac=ces: challenges
- RCT standard open means older
data and prac=ces
- Requires mul=ple RCTs with large
enough numbers
- Researchers usually define
ques=ons
- Evidence base developed with
- lder popula=ons in long-term
services
- Mul=ple fidelity requirements (IPS,
ACT, CSC, etc.)
- Key disciplines and prac=ces
missing (engagement, peer support, nursing)
SLIDE 18 Limita=ons of research findings
- Controlled condi=ons
- Eligibility restric=ons
- Timing driven by funding
- Years to come to publica=on
- Nega=ve results open go
unpublished; data is some=mes presented in its most “favorable” light
- Sta=s=cal significance does not
always translate to individual
- Lack of bridge between experiment
and implementa=on
SLIDE 19 The line between research/ evalua=on and advocacy
- Poten=al for over-interpreta=on and
- ver-statement
- Community members are easily misled by
downward graphs
- Lack of guidance on adapta=on (age,
cultural, varia=on in presenta=on)
- “Proving the case” versus con=nual
learning
- Proving the case is easy when things are as
bad as they have been!!
- Can’t be complacent with what we’ve
learned so far
SLIDE 20 Implementa=on dangers in early psychosis
- Popula=on vs. clinic-based framework
- Who is lep out? Who is not engaged?
- Unintended consequences of cliffs”:
- Prodrome vs. FEP,
- Two-year vs. long-term support
SLIDE 21 The power of numbers: EPINET
- Rapid learning process
- Defining common data set
and prac=ces
- PhenX measures first step
SLIDE 22 Crea=ng the field!
- Lots of California examples (university-local connec=ons)
- Social media strategies, reducing metabolic disorder
(Orygen, UC Davis, New South Wales)
- Clinical high risk na=onal mee=ng
- Data sharing: NAPLS and EDIPPP (Risk Calculator)
- Beginnings of Community-Based Par=cipatory Research:
EASA Connec=ons example (Lived experience and our movement toward community-based par=cipatory research)*
- *funded by Na=onal Ins=tute on Disability, Independent Living, and
Rehabilita=on Research (NIDILRR), through Portland State University's Pathways program
SLIDE 23
EASA Connec=ons Logic Model
SLIDE 24
SLIDE 25 How We Might Learn from Each Other
- Ar=culate common goals across programs
- Work on clear measurements to facilitate
comparability
- Challenge our field’s assump=ons (i.e. is short DUP
always good?)
- Par=cipate in research and peer review
- Work toward Community-Based Par=cipatory
Research approaches and prac=ce-based evidence
- Recognize and facilitate sharing of diverse exper=se
SLIDE 26 “Crowd-sourcing” research (Large-scale peer review??)
- What does research teach us; what other data is
available?
- How can this help us?
- What conclusions should we NOT draw?
- Are we asking the right ques=ons?
SLIDE 27 Integra=ng the Evidence into an Evolving System of Care
- Oregon is not California but we both care about
young people and families!
- Crea=ng a shared context and framework can help
us move more rapidly toward a new standard of care
- We need to integrate research but learn from lived
experience and how a community-based perspec=ve
- We will all play a role in an exci=ng =me of
important break-throughs.
SLIDE 28
PEPPNET…
SLIDE 29 To contact us…
- Tamara Sale, MA, tsale@pdx.edu