Serota David P, Rosenbloom Liza, Hervera Belén, Seo Grace, Feaster Daniel J, Metsch Lisa R, Suarez Edward, Chueng Teresa A, Hernandez Salma, Rodriguez Allan E, Tookes Hansel E, Doblecki-Lewis Susanne, Bartholomew Tyler S
Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, Florida, USA.
Division of Biostatistics, Department of Public Health Sciences, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, Florida, USA.
Open Forum Infect Dis. 2022 Dec 21;10(1):ofac688. doi: 10.1093/ofid/ofac688. eCollection 2023 Jan.
To address the infectious disease (ID) and substance use disorder (SUD) syndemic, we developed an integrated ID/SUD clinical team rooted in harm reduction at a county hospital in Miami, Florida. The Severe Injection-Related Infection (SIRI) team treats people who inject drugs (PWID) and provides medical care, SUD treatment, and patient navigation during hospitalization and after hospital discharge. We assessed the impact of the SIRI team on ID and SUD treatment and healthcare utilization outcomes.
We prospectively collected data on patients seen by the SIRI team. A diagnostic code algorithm confirmed by chart review was used to identify a historical control group of patients with SIRI hospitalizations in the year preceding implementation of the SIRI team. The primary outcome was death or readmission within 90 days post-hospital discharge. Secondary outcomes included initiation of medications for opioid use disorder (MOUD) and antibiotic course completion.
There were 129 patients included in the study: 59 in the SIRI team intervention and 70 in the pre-SIRI team control group. SIRI team patients had a 45% risk reduction (aRR, 0.55 [95% confidence interval CI, .32-.95]; 24% vs 44%) of being readmitted in 90 days or dying compared to pre-SIRI historical controls. SIRI team patients were more likely to initiate MOUD in the hospital (93% vs 33%, < .01), complete antibiotic treatment (90% vs 60%, < .01), and less likely to have patient-directed discharge (17% vs 37%, = .02).
An integrated ID/SUD team was associated with improvements in healthcare utilization, MOUD initiation, and antibiotic completion for PWID with infections.
为应对传染病(ID)和物质使用障碍(SUD)的共病问题,我们在佛罗里达州迈阿密的一家县医院组建了一个以减少伤害为基础的ID/SUD综合临床团队。严重注射相关感染(SIRI)团队为注射吸毒者(PWID)提供治疗,并在住院期间和出院后提供医疗护理、SUD治疗以及患者导航服务。我们评估了SIRI团队对ID和SUD治疗以及医疗保健利用结果的影响。
我们前瞻性地收集了SIRI团队诊治患者的数据。通过图表审查确认的诊断编码算法用于确定SIRI团队实施前一年因SIRI住院患者的历史对照组。主要结局是出院后90天内死亡或再次入院。次要结局包括启动阿片类物质使用障碍药物治疗(MOUD)和抗生素疗程完成情况。
本研究共纳入129例患者:SIRI团队干预组59例,SIRI团队实施前对照组70例。与SIRI团队实施前的历史对照组相比,SIRI团队的患者在90天内再次入院或死亡的风险降低了45%(调整后风险比,0.55[95%置信区间CI,0.32 - 0.95];24%对44%)。SIRI团队的患者更有可能在医院启动MOUD(93%对33%,P < 0.01),完成抗生素治疗(90%对60%,P < 0.01),且患者主导出院的可能性较小(17%对37%,P = 0.02)。
ID/SUD综合团队与改善感染的PWID的医疗保健利用、MOUD启动和抗生素疗程完成情况相关。