A Novel Use of the "3-Day Rule": Post-discharge Methadone Dosing in the Emergency Department.

IF 1.8 3区 医学 Q2 EMERGENCY MEDICINE
Jenna K Nikolaides, Tran H Tran, Elisabeth Ramsey, Sophia Salib, Henry Swoboda
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Abstract

Introduction: Methadone is a medically necessary and lifesaving medication for many patients with opioid use disorder. To adequately address these patients' needs, methadone should be offered in the hospital, but barriers exist that limit its continuation upon discharge. The code of federal regulations allows for methadone dosing as an inpatient as well as outpatient dispensing for up to three days to facilitate linkage to treatment. As a quality initiative, we created a new workflow for discharging patients on methadone to return to the emergency department (ED) for uninterrupted dosing.

Methods: Our addiction medicine team changed hospital methadone policy to better allow hospitalization as a window of opportunity to start methadone. This necessitated the creation of a warm-handoff process to link patients to methadone clinics if that linkage could not happen immediately on discharge. Thus, our team created the "ED Bridge" process, which uses the "3-day rule" to dispense methadone from the ED post hospital discharge. We then followed every patient we directed through this workflow as an observational cohort for outcomes and trends.

Results: Of the patients for whom ED bridge dosing was planned, 40.4% completed all bridge dosing and an additional 17.3% received at least one but not all bridge doses. Established methadone patients made up 38.1% of successful linkages, and 61.9% were patients who were newly started on methadone in the hospital.

Conclusion: Improving methadone as a treatment option remains an ongoing issue for policymakers and advocates. Our ED bridge workflow allows us to expand access and continuation of methadone now using existing laws and regulations, and to better use hospitals as a point of entry into methadone treatment.

3 天规则 "的新用法:急诊科出院后的美沙酮剂量。
导言:美沙酮是许多阿片类药物使用障碍患者在医疗上必需的救命药物。为充分满足这些患者的需求,美沙酮应在医院提供,但目前存在的障碍限制了患者出院后继续使用美沙酮。联邦法规允许住院病人使用美沙酮,也允许门诊病人在最多三天的时间内配发美沙酮,以促进治疗的衔接。作为一项质量举措,我们创建了一个新的工作流程,让服用美沙酮的出院患者返回急诊科(ED)继续服药:我们的成瘾医学团队改变了医院的美沙酮政策,以便更好地将住院作为开始美沙酮治疗的机会之窗。这就需要建立一个热身流程,以便在患者出院时无法立即联系美沙酮诊所的情况下,将患者与美沙酮诊所联系起来。因此,我们的团队创建了 "急诊室桥梁 "流程,利用 "3 天规则 "在出院后从急诊室发放美沙酮。然后,我们将通过这一工作流程引导的每一位患者作为观察组群,跟踪其治疗结果和趋势:在计划接受急诊室桥接给药的患者中,40.4% 的患者完成了所有桥接给药,另有 17.3% 的患者至少接受了一次桥接给药,但未完成所有桥接给药。在成功联系的患者中,38.1%为美沙酮固定患者,61.9%为在医院新开始使用美沙酮的患者:结论:改善美沙酮治疗仍是政策制定者和倡导者一直关注的问题。我们的急诊室桥梁工作流程使我们能够利用现有的法律法规扩大美沙酮的可及性和持续性,并更好地利用医院作为美沙酮治疗的切入点。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Western Journal of Emergency Medicine
Western Journal of Emergency Medicine Medicine-Emergency Medicine
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
3.20%
发文量
125
审稿时长
16 weeks
期刊介绍: WestJEM focuses on how the systems and delivery of emergency care affects health, health disparities, and health outcomes in communities and populations worldwide, including the impact of social conditions on the composition of patients seeking care in emergency departments.
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