Background: The Children and Young People’s Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (CYP-IAPT) was introduced to transform Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS) across England. The programme comprised a set of principles that local CAMHS partnerships were expected to operationalise and embed with the aim of increasing access to services and improving the quality of care. This study explored how the implementation of the CYP-IAPT programme was executed and experienced by CAMHS professionals in the county of Cambridgeshire (UK), and the extent to which the CYP-IAPT principles were perceived to be successfully embedded into everyday practice. Methods: We analysed 275 documents relating to the CYP-IAPT programme issued betw...
Background: The transference of research evidence into routine healthcare practice remains poorly un...
Abstract: Background: The i‐THRIVE Programme is a needs‐based model of care, based on the THRIVE Fra...
The aim of the present research was to explore clinician attitudes to outcome measures and, in parti...
Abstract: Background: The Children and Young People’s Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (C...
Background In 2011, the Children and Young People’s Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (CY...
The Children and Young People's Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (CYP IAPT) programme was...
In 2012 the NHS strategic health authorities in the midlands and east of England funded 14 service t...
A plethora of reports and policies have documented the scale and enormity of mental health problems ...
This paper reports on the qualitative elements of an evaluation of the Midlands and East Mental Heal...
Objective To identify priorities for the delivery of community-based Child and Adolescent Mental hea...
The National i-THRIVE Programme seeks to evaluate the impact of the NHS Englandfunded whole system ...
Introduction Increased demand for child and adolescent mental health services (CAMHS), alongside con...
Background Children and young people’s (CYP) mental health is a major public health concern interna...
Purpose Health policies in England highlight the need for CAMHS to embed new knowledge in practice,...
This thesis examines the impact on child and adolescent psychotherapists within CAMHS of the introdu...
Background: The transference of research evidence into routine healthcare practice remains poorly un...
Abstract: Background: The i‐THRIVE Programme is a needs‐based model of care, based on the THRIVE Fra...
The aim of the present research was to explore clinician attitudes to outcome measures and, in parti...
Abstract: Background: The Children and Young People’s Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (C...
Background In 2011, the Children and Young People’s Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (CY...
The Children and Young People's Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (CYP IAPT) programme was...
In 2012 the NHS strategic health authorities in the midlands and east of England funded 14 service t...
A plethora of reports and policies have documented the scale and enormity of mental health problems ...
This paper reports on the qualitative elements of an evaluation of the Midlands and East Mental Heal...
Objective To identify priorities for the delivery of community-based Child and Adolescent Mental hea...
The National i-THRIVE Programme seeks to evaluate the impact of the NHS Englandfunded whole system ...
Introduction Increased demand for child and adolescent mental health services (CAMHS), alongside con...
Background Children and young people’s (CYP) mental health is a major public health concern interna...
Purpose Health policies in England highlight the need for CAMHS to embed new knowledge in practice,...
This thesis examines the impact on child and adolescent psychotherapists within CAMHS of the introdu...
Background: The transference of research evidence into routine healthcare practice remains poorly un...
Abstract: Background: The i‐THRIVE Programme is a needs‐based model of care, based on the THRIVE Fra...
The aim of the present research was to explore clinician attitudes to outcome measures and, in parti...