Program in Addiction Medicine, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT.
Department of Internal Medicine, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT.
J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr. 2021 Jul 1;87(3):959-970. doi: 10.1097/QAI.0000000000002666.
We sought to characterize readiness, barriers to, and facilitators of providing medications for addiction treatment (MAT) in HIV clinics.
Four HIV clinics in the northeastern United States.
Mixed-methods formative evaluation conducted June 2017-February 2019. Surveys assessed readiness [visual analog scale, less ready (0-<7) vs. more ready (≥7-10)]; evidence and context ratings for MAT provision; and preferred addiction treatment model. A subset (n = 37) participated in focus groups.
Among 71 survey respondents (48% prescribers), the proportion more ready to provide addiction treatment medications varied across substances [tobacco (76%), opioid (61%), and alcohol (49%) treatment medications (P values < 0.05)]. Evidence subscale scores were higher for those more ready to provide tobacco [median (interquartile range) = 4.0 (4.0, 5.0) vs. 4.0 (3.0, 4.0), P = 0.008] treatment medications, but not significantly different for opioid [5.0 (4.0, 5.0) vs. 4.0 (4.0, 5.0), P = 0.11] and alcohol [4.0 (3.0, 5.0) vs. 4.0 (3.0, 4.0), P = 0.42] treatment medications. Median context subscale scores ranged from 3.3 to 4.0 and generally did not vary by readiness status (P values > 0.05). Most favored integrating MAT into HIV care but preferred models differed across substances. Barriers to MAT included identification of treatment-eligible patients, variable experiences with MAT and perceived medication complexity, perceived need for robust behavioral services, and inconsistent availability of on-site specialists. Facilitators included knowledge of adverse health consequences of opioid and tobacco use, local champions, focus on quality improvement, and multidisciplinary teamwork.
Efforts to implement MAT in HIV clinics should address both gaps in perspectives regarding the evidence for MAT and contextual factors and may require substance-specific models.
我们旨在描述在 HIV 诊所提供药物治疗成瘾(MAT)的准备情况、障碍和促进因素。
美国东北部的四家 HIV 诊所。
2017 年 6 月至 2019 年 2 月进行了混合方法形成性评估。调查评估了准备情况[视觉模拟量表,准备不足(0-<7)与准备充分(≥7-10)];提供 MAT 的证据和背景评价;以及首选的成瘾治疗模式。一个子集(n=37)参加了焦点小组。
在 71 名调查参与者(48%的处方者)中,准备提供成瘾治疗药物的比例因物质而异[烟草(76%)、阿片类药物(61%)和酒精(49%)治疗药物(P 值<0.05)]。准备提供烟草治疗药物的受访者证据子量表评分较高[中位数(四分位距)=4.0(4.0,5.0)比 4.0(3.0,4.0),P=0.008],但阿片类药物[5.0(4.0,5.0)比 4.0(4.0,5.0),P=0.11]和酒精[4.0(3.0,5.0)比 4.0(3.0,4.0),P=0.42]治疗药物的评分无显著差异。中位数背景子量表评分范围为 3.3 至 4.0,且通常不受准备状态的影响(P 值>0.05)。大多数人赞成将 MAT 整合到 HIV 护理中,但不同物质的首选模式不同。MAT 的障碍包括识别有治疗资格的患者、对 MAT 的经验和感知药物复杂性的差异、对强大行为服务的需求以及现场专家的供应不一致。促进因素包括对阿片类药物和烟草使用的不良健康后果的认识、当地拥护者、对质量改进的关注以及多学科团队合作。
在 HIV 诊所实施 MAT 的努力应同时解决对 MAT 证据和背景因素的看法差距,并且可能需要特定于物质的模式。