School-based screening for childhood anxiety problems and intervention delivery: a codesign approach

Author:

Williamson VictoriaORCID,Larkin Michael,Reardon Tessa,Pearcey Samantha,Button Roberta,Green Iheoma,Hill Claire,Stallard Paul,Spence Susan H,Breen Maria,Mcdonald Ian,Ukoumunne ObiohaORCID,Ford Tamsin,Violato Mara,Sniehotta Falko,Stainer Jason,Gray AlastairORCID,Brown Paul,Sancho Michelle,Morgan Fran,Jasper Bec,Creswell Cathy

Abstract

ObjectivesA very small proportion of children with anxiety problems receive evidence-based treatment. Barriers to access include difficulties with problem identification, concerns about stigma and a lack of clarity about how to access specialist services and their limited availability. A school-based programme that integrates screening to identify those children who are most likely to be experiencing anxiety problems with the offer of intervention has the potential to overcome many of these barriers. This article is a process-based account of how we used codesign to develop a primary school-based screening and intervention programme for child anxiety problems.DesignCodesign.SettingUK primary schools.ParticipantsData were collected from year 4 children (aged 8–9 years), parents, school staff and mental health practitioners.ResultsWe report how the developed programme was experienced and perceived by a range of users, including parents, children, school staff and mental health practitioners, as well as how the programme was adapted following user feedback.ConclusionsWe reflect on the mitigation techniques we employed, the lessons learnt from the codesign process and give recommendations that may inform the development and implementation of future school-based screening and intervention programmes.

Funder

Applied Research Collaboration

Royal Devon and Exeter NHS Foundation Trust

Oxford Biomedical Research

National Institute for Health Research

Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

General Medicine

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