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Oct 7 2024

Using the FRAME and FRAME-IS to Document Adaptations to Evidence-based Interventions and Implementation Strategies

October 7, 2024

11:00 AM - 12:30 PM

Address

909 S. Wolcott Ave, COMRB Room 2175, Chicago, IL 60612

Adaptation is common when implementing interventions and programs and may be crucial for promoting their sustainment. This presentation will discuss the importance of making and documenting adaptations, and of studying their impact. It will provide an overview of adaptation frameworks, and discuss how the FRAME is used to document and study the impact of adaptations to interventions. In addition,  it will provide an overview of how the FRAME-IS can be used to document changes to implementation strategies, as well as important next steps for research in this area.

If you cannot attend in person, a zoom link is available.

Register

Contact

Claire Corcoran

Date posted

Aug 27, 2024

Date updated

Aug 27, 2024

Speakers

Shannon Wiltsey Stirman, PhD | Professor | Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
Stanford University
Dissemination and Training Division, National Center for PTSD

Shannon Wiltsey Stirman is a Professor in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at Stanford and a Psychologist at the National Center for PTSD's Dissemination and Training Division. Areas of research emphasis include implementation science (particularly training, fidelity, adaptation and sustainment), evidence-based treatment for PTSD, depression, and suicide prevention, and use of technology to support access to evidence-based mental health interventions. As a co-lead of the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Science's Mental Health Innovation and Technology Hub, she worked with a team at Stanford to develop Pause a Moment, a digital wellbeing program for healthcare workers who experience COVID-10 stressors (pam.stanford.edu). Most recently, she has been working on the use of Large Language Models to support evidence-based mental health interventions. She is the co-author of Getting Unstuck from PTSD: Using Cognitive Processing Therapy to Guide Your Recovery. She served on the Board of Directors for the American Psychological Association and as the Chair of the Established Network of Expertise for the Society for Implementation Research Collaboration. She was awarded the Association of Behavior and Cognitive Therapy's Mid-Career Innovator award in 2018. Her research has been funded by the National Institute of Mental Health, VA QUERI, private foundations, and the Canadian Institute for Health Research.