Behavioral Research in Technology and Engineering (BRiTE) Center, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of Washington, 1959 NE Pacific Street, Box 356560, Seattle, WA, 98195, USA.
Addict Sci Clin Pract. 2021 Jun 15;16(1):38. doi: 10.1186/s13722-021-00247-5.
Measurement-based care (MBC) is the practice of routinely administering standardized measures to support clinical decision-making and monitor treatment progress. Despite evidence of its effectiveness, MBC is rarely adopted in routine substance use disorder (SUD) treatment settings and little is known about the factors that may improve its adoptability in these settings. The current study gathered qualitative data from SUD treatment clinicians about their perceptions of MBC, the clinical outcomes they would most like to monitor in MBC, and suggestions for the design and implementation of MBC systems in their settings.
Fifteen clinicians from one publicly-funded and two privately-funded outpatient SUD treatment clinics participated in one-on-one research interviews. Interviews focused on clinicians' perceived benefits, drawbacks, and ideas related to implementing MBC technology into their clinical workflows. Interviews were audio recorded, transcribed, and coded to allow for thematic analysis using a mixed deductive and inductive approach. Clinicians also completed a card sorting task to rate the perceived helpfulness of routinely measuring and monitoring different treatment outcomes.
Clinicians reported several potential benefits of MBC, including improved patient-provider communication, client empowerment, and improved communication between clinicians. Clinicians also expressed potential drawbacks, including concerns about subjectivity in patient self-reports, limits to personalization, increased time burdens, and needing to learn to use new technologies. Clinicians generated several ideas and preferences aimed at minimizing burden of MBC, illustrating clinical changes over time, improving ease of use, and improving personalization. Numerous patient outcomes were identified as "very helpful" to track, including coping skills, social support, and motivation for change.
MBC may be a beneficial tool for improving clinical care in SUD treatment settings. MBC tools may be particularly adoptable if they are compatible with existing workflows, help illustrate gradual and nonlinear progress in SUD treatment, measure outcomes perceived as clinically useful, accommodate multiple use cases and stakeholder groups, and are framed as an additional source of information meant to augment, rather than replace, existing practices and information sources.
基于测量的护理(MBC)是一种常规管理标准化测量的做法,旨在支持临床决策并监测治疗进展。尽管已有证据表明其有效性,但 MBC 在常规物质使用障碍(SUD)治疗环境中很少采用,对于可能提高其在这些环境中采用性的因素知之甚少。本研究从 SUD 治疗临床医生那里收集了定性数据,了解他们对 MBC 的看法、他们最希望在 MBC 中监测的临床结果,以及在其环境中设计和实施 MBC 系统的建议。
来自一家公共资助和两家私人资助的门诊 SUD 治疗诊所的 15 名临床医生参加了一对一的研究访谈。访谈重点关注临床医生对实施 MBC 技术纳入其临床工作流程的益处、缺点和想法。访谈进行了录音、转录和编码,以便采用混合演绎和归纳方法进行主题分析。临床医生还完成了一项卡片分类任务,对常规测量和监测不同治疗结果的有用性进行评分。
临床医生报告了 MBC 的一些潜在益处,包括改善医患沟通、增强患者自主权以及改善临床医生之间的沟通。临床医生还表达了一些潜在的缺点,包括对患者自我报告的主观性、个性化的限制、时间负担增加以及需要学习使用新技术的担忧。临床医生提出了一些旨在最小化 MBC 负担、说明随时间变化的临床变化、提高易用性和个性化的想法和偏好。许多患者结果被确定为“非常有帮助”,包括应对技能、社会支持和改变动机。
MBC 可能是改善 SUD 治疗环境中临床护理的有益工具。如果 MBC 工具与现有工作流程兼容、帮助说明 SUD 治疗中的逐渐和非线性进展、测量被认为具有临床意义的结果、适应多种用例和利益相关者群体,并且被视为额外的信息来源,旨在补充而不是替代现有实践和信息来源,那么 MBC 工具可能更容易被采用。