Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Department of Emergency Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts.
University of California, Irvine, School of Medicine, Irvine, California.
West J Emerg Med. 2020 Nov 2;21(6):257-263. doi: 10.5811/westjem.2020.7.46079.
Recent evidence shows that emergency physicians (EP) can help patients obtain evidence-based treatment for Opioid Use Disorder by starting medication for addiction treatment (MAT) directly in the Emergency Department (ED). Many EDs struggle to provide options for maintenance treatment once patients are discharged from the ED. Health systems around the country are in need of a care delivery structure to link ED patients with OUD to care following initiation of buprenorphine. This paper reviews the three most common approaches to form effective partnerships between EDs and primary care/addiction medicine services: the Project Alcohol and Substance Abuse Services and Referral to Treatment (ASSERT) model, Bridge model, and ED-Bridge model.The ASSERT Model is characterized by peer educators or community workers in the ED directly referring patients suffering from OUD in the ED to local addiction treatment services. The Bridge model encourages prescribing physicians in an ED to screen patients for OUD, provide a short-term prescription for buprenorphine, and then refer the patient directly to an outpatient Bridge Clinic that is co-located in the same hospital but is a separate from the ED. This Bridge Clinic is staffed by addiction trained physicians and mid-level clinicians. The ED-Bridge model employs physicians trained in both emergency medicine and addiction medicine to serve within the ED as well as in the follow up addiction clinic.Distinct from the Bridge Clinic model above, EPs in the ED-Bridge model are both able to screen at-risk patients in the ED, often starting treatment, and to longitudinally follow patients in a regularly scheduled addiction clinic. This paper provides examples of these three models as well as implementation and logistical details to support a health system to better address OUD in their communities.
最近的证据表明,急诊医师(EP)可以通过在急诊科直接开始治疗药物滥用的药物(MAT)来帮助患者获得阿片类药物使用障碍的循证治疗。许多急诊科在患者从急诊科出院后都难以提供维持治疗的选择。全国各地的卫生系统都需要一种护理提供结构,将 ED 患者与 OUD 联系起来,并在开始使用丁丙诺啡后为他们提供护理。本文回顾了 ED 与初级保健/成瘾医学服务之间建立有效伙伴关系的三种最常见方法:项目酒精和药物滥用服务和转介治疗(ASSERT)模型、桥梁模型和 ED-桥梁模型。ASSERT 模型的特点是 ED 中的同伴教育者或社区工作者直接将 ED 中患有 OUD 的患者转介到当地的成瘾治疗服务机构。桥梁模型鼓励 ED 中的处方医生对 OUD 患者进行筛查,提供短期丁丙诺啡处方,然后直接将患者转介到位于同一医院但与 ED 分开的门诊桥梁诊所。该桥梁诊所由接受过成瘾治疗培训的医生和中级临床医生组成。ED-桥梁模型则是由接受过急诊医学和成瘾医学培训的医生在 ED 内以及后续的成瘾诊所内提供服务。与上述桥梁诊所模式不同,ED 中的 EP 不仅能够在 ED 中筛查高危患者,通常还能够开始治疗,并在定期安排的成瘾诊所中对患者进行纵向随访。本文提供了这三种模型的示例,以及实施和后勤细节,以支持卫生系统更好地解决其社区中的 OUD 问题。