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Safety planning is a commonly used, evidence-based intervention for suicide prevention. There is a need for continuous engagement with safety plans post-discharge, and the improvement of safety plan portability has been discussed within our mental health organisation. This has led to the development of an app, called the Hope App. This study aims to implement this app into routine practice in a Canadian psychiatric emergency department.
Aims
We aimed to describe a collaborative, theoretically driven approach to co-design implementation strategies to elicit behaviour change among emergency department clinicians; co-develop a set of tailored, theory-informed, multifaceted implementation strategies for embedding an app into a psychiatric emergency department; and describe engagement evaluation received by the co-design team.
Method
Co-design approaches and the Behaviour Change Wheel were used to develop implementation strategies with clinicians, patients and care partners. The co-design team consisted of 12 members, and we held four design sessions. Design sessions were iterative in nature and organised such that the findings of each session fed into the next session.
Results
We identified 11 implementation strategies encompassing different combinations of intervention functions and behaviour change techniques, targeting barriers and leveraging facilitators identified in our previous work.
Conclusions
The tailored implementation strategies developed in this study have the potential to fill existing gaps in integrating digital technology. A key strength of this study is its use of behaviour change theories and a collaborative approach. The strategies are designed to align with the needs and preferences of clinicians, patients and care partners.
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