UTN Navigation Service
Cross-source consensus on UTN Navigation Service from 1 sources and 6 claims.
1 sources · 6 claims
Uses
How it works
Benefits
Background
Highlighted claims
- The UTN service was developed jointly by the University of Toronto and CAMH and launched in fall 2022. — Protocol for a multimethods study evaluating a transition pathway between hospital settings and postsecondary institutions: the NavigateCAMPUS study
- UTN was built through Expedited Experience-Based Co-Design, adapting navigator principles from youth mental health to the postsecondary context. — Protocol for a multimethods study evaluating a transition pathway between hospital settings and postsecondary institutions: the NavigateCAMPUS study
- UTN is available to both domestic and international undergraduate and graduate students at all three UofT campuses who receive care at CAMH. — Protocol for a multimethods study evaluating a transition pathway between hospital settings and postsecondary institutions: the NavigateCAMPUS study
- Upon admission to a CAMH clinical service, a student is assigned a trained navigator clinician who provides continuous, personalised support through care transitions. — Protocol for a multimethods study evaluating a transition pathway between hospital settings and postsecondary institutions: the NavigateCAMPUS study
- Navigators collaborate with students to outline transition goals, assess transition readiness, and determine post-discharge care level and type. — Protocol for a multimethods study evaluating a transition pathway between hospital settings and postsecondary institutions: the NavigateCAMPUS study
- UTN aims to help students re-engage with academic activities and prevent recurrent crises, thereby reducing future hospital use. — Protocol for a multimethods study evaluating a transition pathway between hospital settings and postsecondary institutions: the NavigateCAMPUS study