Supporting primary care clinicians in caring for patients with alcohol use disorder: study protocol for Records for Alcohol Care Enhancement (RACE), a factorial four-arm randomized trial.

IF 3.2 2区 医学 Q1 SUBSTANCE ABUSE
Kara M Magane, Richard Saitz, Sarah Fielman, Marc R LaRochelle, Christopher W Shanahan, Christine A Pace, Michael LaValley, Kaley Penington, Skylar Karzhevsky, Emily Hurstak
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Unhealthy alcohol use, a spectrum of use inclusive of risky consumption and alcohol use disorder (AUD), is a leading cause of preventable death in the United States. Most people with unhealthy alcohol use do not receive evidence-based treatment. This four-arm factorial design randomized trial will assess whether population health management (PHM) and clinical care management (CCM) support for primary care providers (PCPs) are associated with improved AUD treatment engagement among their patients, beyond electronic health record (EHR) prompting and decision support alone.

Methods: PCPs from an urban safety-net hospital-based primary care clinic are randomized to one of four groups (1) EHR best practice advisory (BPA) and clinical decision support tools for unhealthy alcohol use (BPA), (2) BPA plus population health manager support, (3) BPA plus clinical care manager support, and (4) all three. All PCPs will have access to the EHR BPA and decision support tools which provide chart-based advisories and order set navigation. PCPs assigned to receive PHM support will receive quarterly panel-level feedback on AUD treatment metrics for their patients. PCPs assigned to receive CCM support will receive CCM facilitation of AUD treatment processes including medication counseling, referrals, and support through direct patient interactions. The primary outcome will be the percent of patients engaged in AUD treatment among those with a new AUD diagnosis on a PCP's panel. Secondary outcomes include the percent of patients with a new diagnosis of AUD who (1) initiated AUD treatment, (2) were prescribed AUD medications within 90 days, and (3) numerical counts of a range of AUD health services (outpatient encounters, specialty AUD care encounters, referrals, and acute healthcare utilization) in this sample. We will assess the primary outcome and the acute healthcare utilization secondary outcomes using Medicaid claims; the remaining secondary outcomes will be assessed using EHR data.

Discussion: The study will evaluate how a targeted EHR innovation alone, compared with population health and care management enhancements alone or in combination, impact engagement in AUD treatment, a national quality of care measure. Findings will advance understanding of supports needed to improve systems of care for AUD in general settings.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier/registration number (NCT number): NCT05492942.

支持初级保健临床医生照顾酒精使用障碍患者:酒精护理增强记录(RACE)的研究方案,一项四组随机试验。
背景:不健康的酒精使用,包括危险消费和酒精使用障碍(AUD)在内的一系列使用,是美国可预防死亡的主要原因。大多数不健康饮酒的人没有接受循证治疗。这项四组因子设计随机试验将评估初级保健提供者(pcp)的人口健康管理(PHM)和临床护理管理(CCM)支持是否与改善患者的AUD治疗参与有关,而不仅仅是电子健康记录(EHR)提示和决策支持。方法:将来自城市安全网医院基础初级保健诊所的pcp随机分为四组(1)EHR最佳实践咨询(BPA)和不健康酒精使用临床决策支持工具(BPA), (2) BPA加人口健康管理人员支持,(3)BPA加临床护理管理人员支持,以及(4)所有这三组。所有pcp都可以访问EHR BPA和决策支持工具,这些工具提供基于图表的咨询和订单集导航。指定接受PHM支持的pcp将每季度收到关于其患者AUD治疗指标的小组级反馈。指定接受CCM支持的pcp将接受CCM对AUD治疗过程的促进,包括药物咨询、转诊和通过患者直接互动的支持。主要结果将是在PCP面板上新诊断为AUD的患者中接受AUD治疗的患者百分比。次要结局包括新诊断为AUD的患者的百分比(1)开始AUD治疗,(2)在90天内处方AUD药物,以及(3)本样本中一系列AUD医疗服务(门诊就诊,专业AUD护理就诊,转诊和急性医疗保健利用)的数值计数。我们将使用医疗补助申请评估主要结局和急性医疗保健利用的次要结局;其余次要结局将使用电子病历数据进行评估。讨论:本研究将评估单独进行有针对性的电子病历创新,与单独或联合加强人口健康和护理管理相比,如何影响AUD治疗的参与,这是一项国家护理质量措施。研究结果将促进对在一般情况下改善AUD护理系统所需支持的理解。试验注册:ClinicalTrials.gov标识符/注册号(NCT号):NCT05492942。
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
Addiction Science & Clinical Practice
Addiction Science & Clinical Practice Psychology-Clinical Psychology
CiteScore
3.90
自引率
10.80%
发文量
64
审稿时长
28 weeks
期刊介绍: Addiction Science & Clinical Practice provides a forum for clinically relevant research and perspectives that contribute to improving the quality of care for people with unhealthy alcohol, tobacco, or other drug use and addictive behaviours across a spectrum of clinical settings. Addiction Science & Clinical Practice accepts articles of clinical relevance related to the prevention and treatment of unhealthy alcohol, tobacco, and other drug use across the spectrum of clinical settings. Topics of interest address issues related to the following: the spectrum of unhealthy use of alcohol, tobacco, and other drugs among the range of affected persons (e.g., not limited by age, race/ethnicity, gender, or sexual orientation); the array of clinical prevention and treatment practices (from health messages, to identification and early intervention, to more extensive interventions including counseling and pharmacotherapy and other management strategies); and identification and management of medical, psychiatric, social, and other health consequences of substance use. Addiction Science & Clinical Practice is particularly interested in articles that address how to improve the quality of care for people with unhealthy substance use and related conditions as described in the (US) Institute of Medicine report, Improving the Quality of Healthcare for Mental Health and Substance Use Conditions (Washington, DC: National Academies Press, 2006). Such articles address the quality of care and of health services. Although the journal also welcomes submissions that address these conditions in addiction speciality-treatment settings, the journal is particularly interested in including articles that address unhealthy use outside these settings, including experience with novel models of care and outcomes, and outcomes of research-practice collaborations. Although Addiction Science & Clinical Practice is generally not an outlet for basic science research, we will accept basic science research manuscripts that have clearly described potential clinical relevance and are accessible to audiences outside a narrow laboratory research field.
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