Department of Medicine, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, OR, USA.
Center for Health Systems Effectiveness, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, OR, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2019 Dec;34(12):2796-2803. doi: 10.1007/s11606-019-05251-9.
Hospitalizations due to medical and surgical complications of substance use disorder (SUD) are rising. Most hospitals lack systems to treat SUD, and most people with SUD do not engage in treatment after discharge.
Determine the effect of a hospital-based addiction medicine consult service, the Improving Addiction Care Team (IMPACT), on post-hospital SUD treatment engagement.
Cohort study using multivariable analysis of Oregon Medicaid claims comparing IMPACT patients with propensity-matched controls.
18-64-year-old Oregon Medicaid beneficiaries with SUD, hospitalized at an Oregon hospital between July 1, 2015, and September 30, 2016. IMPACT patients (n = 208) were matched to controls (n = 416) using a propensity score that accounted for SUD, gender, age, race, residence region, and diagnoses.
IMPACT included hospital-based consultation care from an interdisciplinary team of addiction medicine physicians, social workers, and peers with lived experience in recovery. IMPACT met patients during hospitalization; offered pharmacotherapy, behavioral treatments, and harm reduction services; and supported linkages to SUD treatment after discharge.
Healthcare Effectiveness Data and Information Set (HEDIS) measure of SUD treatment engagement, defined as two or more claims on two separate days for SUD care within 34 days of discharge.
Only 17.2% of all patients were engaged in SUD treatment before hospitalization. IMPACT patients engaged in SUD treatment following discharge more frequently than controls (38.9% vs. 23.3%, p < 0.01; aOR 2.15, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.29-3.58). IMPACT participation remained associated with SUD treatment engagement when limiting the sample to people who were not engaged in treatment prior to hospitalization (aOR 2.63; 95% CI 1.46-4.72).
Hospital-based addiction medicine consultation can improve SUD treatment engagement, which is associated with reduced substance use, mortality, and other important clinical outcomes. National expansion of such models represents an opportunity to address an enduring gap in the SUD treatment continuum.
因物质使用障碍(SUD)的医疗和手术并发症而住院的人数正在上升。大多数医院缺乏治疗 SUD 的系统,大多数 SUD 患者出院后也不参与治疗。
确定基于医院的成瘾医学咨询服务(IMPACT)对出院后 SUD 治疗参与度的影响。
使用俄勒冈州医疗补助索赔的多变量分析对队列研究进行比较,比较了 IMPACT 患者和倾向匹配对照组。
18-64 岁的俄勒冈州医疗补助受益人,在俄勒冈州医院住院,时间为 2015 年 7 月 1 日至 2016 年 9 月 30 日。IMPACT 患者(n=208)与对照组(n=416)通过倾向评分进行匹配,该评分考虑了 SUD、性别、年龄、种族、居住地区和诊断。
IMPACT 包括由成瘾医学医生、社会工作者和具有康复经验的同行组成的跨学科团队提供的医院内咨询护理。IMPACT 在住院期间与患者会面;提供药物治疗、行为治疗和减少伤害服务;并支持出院后与 SUD 治疗的联系。
所有患者中只有 17.2%在住院前接受 SUD 治疗。与对照组相比,IMPACT 患者出院后更频繁地接受 SUD 治疗(38.9% vs. 23.3%,p<0.01;优势比 2.15,95%置信区间[CI]1.29-3.58)。当将样本限制为住院前未接受治疗的人群时,IMPACT 的参与仍然与 SUD 治疗的参与相关(优势比 2.63;95%置信区间 1.46-4.72)。
基于医院的成瘾医学咨询可以提高 SUD 治疗的参与度,这与减少物质使用、死亡率和其他重要临床结果有关。此类模式在全国范围内的扩展代表了解决 SUD 治疗连续体中持久差距的机会。