Background <p>The mental health and well-being of school teachers is critical not only for their individual health but also for the quality and stability of educational systems. Numerous interventions have been developed to address teachers’ mental health challenges, yet their implementation in everyday school settings remains limited. Understanding implementation determinants, strategies, and outcomes is essential for improving sustainable implementation, intervention effectiveness and broader public health impact. This scoping review explored how implementation is addressed in studies evaluating mental health-promoting interventions for teachers.</p> Methods <p>Following Arksey and O’Malley’s (2005) and Levac et al.’s (2010) frameworks and PRISMA-ScR guidelines, we systematically searched Scopus and EBSCOhost up to April 2025. Studies were included if they evaluated an intervention targeting teachers’ mental health and reported at least one implementation aspect. Data extraction was guided by leading implementation science frameworks.</p> Results <p>Of 4,062 identified records, 16 met the inclusion criteria. Most studies were primarily effectiveness-focused and assessed early-stage implementation rather than long-term implementation or sustainment. Implementation outcomes such as acceptability and feasibility were frequently reported but rarely grounded in implementation frameworks. Implementation determinants appeared in most studies, predominantly as post hoc barriers, with few studies assessing them a priori to guide implementation planning. Implementation strategies were commonly described but seldom explicitly labeled as such. Most studies examined implementation and intervention outcomes separately, limiting insights into how implementation processes influenced effectiveness. Nevertheless, several insights emerged, including the relevance of training and educating stakeholders, tailoring interventions to context, and strengthening relational dynamics, all examples of implementation strategies, as well as the importance of considering intervention content and implementation jointly.</p> Conclusion <p>Although implementation determinants, strategies, and outcomes were reported in studies on teachers’ mental health interventions, reporting was often fragmented, unsystematic and rarely guided by established frameworks or terminology. Future research should adopt comprehensive, theory-informed approaches that link implementation and intervention content. From a public health perspective, aligning evidence-based interventions, addressing both organizational and individual levels, with context-sensitive implementation strategies is key to sustainably improving teachers’ mental health and strengthening schools as healthy, supportive environments.</p>

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No healthy schools without healthy teachers: a scoping review on implementation determinants, strategies and outcomes of mental health-promoting interventions for school teachers

  • Katharina Sterr,
  • Joachim Bachner,
  • Daniel Alexander Scheller,
  • Filip Mess,
  • Simon Blaschke,
  • Theres Mühlberg,
  • Friederike Butscher,
  • Jan Schmid-Ellinger

摘要

Background

The mental health and well-being of school teachers is critical not only for their individual health but also for the quality and stability of educational systems. Numerous interventions have been developed to address teachers’ mental health challenges, yet their implementation in everyday school settings remains limited. Understanding implementation determinants, strategies, and outcomes is essential for improving sustainable implementation, intervention effectiveness and broader public health impact. This scoping review explored how implementation is addressed in studies evaluating mental health-promoting interventions for teachers.

Methods

Following Arksey and O’Malley’s (2005) and Levac et al.’s (2010) frameworks and PRISMA-ScR guidelines, we systematically searched Scopus and EBSCOhost up to April 2025. Studies were included if they evaluated an intervention targeting teachers’ mental health and reported at least one implementation aspect. Data extraction was guided by leading implementation science frameworks.

Results

Of 4,062 identified records, 16 met the inclusion criteria. Most studies were primarily effectiveness-focused and assessed early-stage implementation rather than long-term implementation or sustainment. Implementation outcomes such as acceptability and feasibility were frequently reported but rarely grounded in implementation frameworks. Implementation determinants appeared in most studies, predominantly as post hoc barriers, with few studies assessing them a priori to guide implementation planning. Implementation strategies were commonly described but seldom explicitly labeled as such. Most studies examined implementation and intervention outcomes separately, limiting insights into how implementation processes influenced effectiveness. Nevertheless, several insights emerged, including the relevance of training and educating stakeholders, tailoring interventions to context, and strengthening relational dynamics, all examples of implementation strategies, as well as the importance of considering intervention content and implementation jointly.

Conclusion

Although implementation determinants, strategies, and outcomes were reported in studies on teachers’ mental health interventions, reporting was often fragmented, unsystematic and rarely guided by established frameworks or terminology. Future research should adopt comprehensive, theory-informed approaches that link implementation and intervention content. From a public health perspective, aligning evidence-based interventions, addressing both organizational and individual levels, with context-sensitive implementation strategies is key to sustainably improving teachers’ mental health and strengthening schools as healthy, supportive environments.