患有妇科癌症的妇女:物质使用障碍的筛查是关键。

Lindsay Shor, Kathryn Trotter
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引用次数: 0

摘要

女性妇科癌症患者的物质使用障碍(SUDs)对治疗依从性、患者福祉、发病率和死亡率构成挑战。尽管sud普遍存在,但常规筛查并未被广泛采用。该质量改进项目实施了经修订的阿片类药物风险工具(ORT-OUD),以筛查妇科肿瘤患者中的sud。目的是为至少80%筛查为高风险的患者提供成瘾精神病学转诊,并证明ORT-OUD在临床实践中实施的可行性,至少75%的高级实践提供者(app)报告它是可行的。ORT-OUD在项目实施期间(3个月)提供给所有18岁及以上同意的患者,并在app的时间表上。患者私下完成ORT-OUD, app对该工具进行评估和评分。得分在3分或以上的患者被转诊到成瘾精神科。然后,高级实践提供者进行了一项调查,以评估他们对项目可行性的看法。描述性统计用于跟踪转诊率和APP感知。在134名接受筛查的患者中,9.7%被确定为SUDs高危人群。在这些患者中,76.9%接受了成瘾精神病学的转诊。100%的app报告ORT-OUD实现是可行的。确定的挑战包括解释筛查工具所需的时间和患者对筛查工具问题的看法。该项目成功地确定了一部分有猝死风险的妇科肿瘤患者,并促进了他们获得专门护理的机会。筛查过程中的挑战突出了患者教育和沟通策略的重要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Women With Gynecologic Cancers: Screening for Substance Use Disorders Is Key.

Substance use disorders (SUDs) among women with gynecologic cancers pose challenges to treatment adherence, patient well-being, morbidity, and mortality. Despite the prevalence of SUDs, routine screening practices have not been widely adopted. This quality improvement project implemented the Revised Opioid Risk Tool (ORT-OUD) to screen for SUDs among gynecologic oncology patients. The aims were to provide a referral to addiction psychiatry in a minimum of 80% of patients who screened as high risk and demonstrate the feasibility of ORT-OUD implementation in clinical practice, with at least 75% of advanced practice providers (APPs) reporting it as feasible. The ORT-OUD was offered to all patients aged 18 years or older, consented, and were on the APPs' schedules during the project implementation period (3 months). Patients completed the ORT-OUD privately, and APPs reviewed and scored the tool. Patients with scores of 3 or higher were offered a referral to addiction psychiatry. Advanced practice providers were then given a survey to assess their perception of the project's feasibility. Descriptive statistics were used to track referral rates and APP perceptions. Of 134 patients screened, 9.7% were identified as high risk for SUDs. Of those patients, 76.9% accepted a referral to addiction psychiatry. One hundred percent of APPs reported the ORT-OUD implementation as feasible. Challenges identified included time needed to explain the screening tool and patients' perceptions of the screening tool questions. This project successfully identified a proportion of gynecologic oncology patients at risk for SUDs and facilitated access to specialized care. Challenges in the screening process highlight the importance of patient education and communication strategies.

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