Department of Psychiatry, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA.
Internal Medicine and Addiction Medicine, Montgomery Family Medicine Associates, Silver Spring, MD, USA.
Subst Use Addctn J. 2024 Jul;45(3):466-472. doi: 10.1177/29767342241233363. Epub 2024 Mar 17.
Shared medical appointments (SMAs) are a novel modality for treating patients with similar conditions, together, by a team of interdisciplinary providers. SMAs benefit patients with substance use disorder (SUD), but no research has focused on the feasibility of implementation of SMAs in a teaching clinic.
Primary care residents rotated in a half-day ambulatory addiction clinic for 4 weeks where a third-year resident co-facilitated 4 SMAs. Confidence, knowledge, and attitudes about SUD care were assessed using web-based surveys at weeks 0, 4, and 8. Pre- and post-intervention scores were compared using a test for paired samples.
Ten residents were included in the analyses. Using a 10-point Likert scale, confidence in SUD knowledge (7.0-8.3, = .003), confidence in counseling patients with SUD (7.1-8.2, = .023), and confidence in facilitating an SMA (5.7-8.3, = .007) showed statistically significant increases from baseline following exposure to the SMAs. Confidence that counseling and other treatments will make a difference for patients with illicit drug use increased (7.1-8.0, = .142), but did not differ statistically. Furthermore, on a 4-point Likert scale, understanding of behavioral therapies for treating and preventing the relapse of SUD (2.9-3.2, = .180) showed a similar increase. Attitudes toward patients with SUD (42.4-42.1, = .303) and physician empathy (119.3-119.2, = .963) did not change from pre- to post-intervention.
SMAs are a feasible training tool in the education of primary care residents on an addiction medicine rotation. Residents develop confidence co-facilitating SMAs after 4 weeks. Overall, exposure to SMAs during residency can provide an opportunity to increase confidence in treating patients with SUD, as well as provide a training modality that may shift the way residents interact with patients receiving SUD treatment.
共病门诊(SMAs)是一种新的治疗模式,通过多学科团队共同治疗患有相似疾病的患者。SMAs 有益于患有物质使用障碍(SUD)的患者,但尚无研究关注 SMA 在教学诊所中的实施可行性。
初级保健住院医师在一个为期 4 周的门诊成瘾诊所轮转,其中一名三年级住院医师共同主持 4 次 SMA。使用基于网络的调查,在第 0、4 和 8 周评估对 SUD 护理的信心、知识和态度。使用配对样本 t 检验比较干预前后的得分。
共纳入 10 名住院医师进行分析。使用 10 分制李克特量表,SUD 知识的信心(7.0-8.3,=0.003)、对 SUD 患者咨询的信心(7.1-8.2,=0.023)和对 SMA 的促进能力的信心(5.7-8.3,=0.007)均显示在暴露于 SMA 后从基线开始呈统计学显著增加。对咨询和其他治疗方法将对非法药物使用患者产生影响的信心增加(7.1-8.0,=0.142),但无统计学差异。此外,在 4 分制李克特量表上,理解治疗和预防 SUD 复发的行为疗法(2.9-3.2,=0.180)也显示出类似的增加。对 SUD 患者的态度(42.4-42.1,=0.303)和医生同理心(119.3-119.2,=0.963)在干预前后没有变化。
在成瘾医学轮转中,SMAs 是初级保健住院医师培训的可行工具。住院医师在 4 周后共同主持 SMA 后建立信心。总体而言,住院期间接触 SMA 可以提供一个机会,提高对治疗 SUD 患者的信心,并提供一种培训模式,可能会改变住院医师与接受 SUD 治疗的患者的互动方式。