This pragmatic, cluster-randomized trial in adult primary care clinics in a healthcare system with a diverse membership will examine the effectiveness of an innovative, multi-faceted intervention, the Addiction Telemedicine Consultant (ATC) service using clinical pharmacists to facilitate alcohol use problems and alcohol use disorder (AUD) pharmacotherapy and specialty addiction treatment entry.
This study will examine the effectiveness of a multi-faceted intervention - the Addiction Telemedicine Consultant service, or "ATC," which consists of: * A 1-hour information session for Primary Care Providers (PCP) about alcohol problems; including alcohol use disorder (AUD) and AUD pharmacotherapy, provided by the research team in collaboration with Kaiser Permanente Northern California (KPNC) addiction medicine and clinical pharmacy leadership. Along with a post session evaluation via survey monkey. * PCP access to expert addiction medicine consultation by KPNC clinical pharmacists, via telephone, videoconference, and secure messaging - during primary care patient visits with the patient present, or asynchronously without the patient present. * Real-time, in-exam-room consultations may include clinical pharmacist assistance with patient assessment, psychoeducation, motivational interventions, and facilitation of patient engagement in addiction treatment. * Asynchronous consultations without the patient present may include clinical pharmacist advice regarding patient-specific treatment options, including pharmacotherapy, psychosocial treatment, and combined treatments, * Ongoing technical assistance for PCPs, including coaching and troubleshooting on alcohol problems assessment and AUD medication prescribing and treatment entry facilitation, from the ATC consultants, as needed. This study will use electronic health record (EHR) data to examine treatment arm effects on implementation outcomes and patient outcomes recorded during the course of regular clinical care, and health services utilization over two years. The study will accomplish this through the following specific aims: Aim 1: To compare the ATC and Usual Care arms on implementation outcomes: AUD medication prescription order rates and specialty addiction treatment referrals over two years. Aim 2: To compare the ATC and UC arms on patient outcomes: AUD medication fills, addiction treatment initiation, alcohol use (quantity/frequency), and services utilization over two years. Aim 3: To understand characteristics associated with ATC implementation, and barriers and facilitators of AUD medication prescription. We will examine provider characteristics (including potential race/ethnic and gender disparities) associated with ATC implementation outcomes using EHR and semi-structured qualitative interviews with PCPs and explore how the different elements of ATC (video consult, telephone, and email) facilitate its implementation. Provider characteristics and EHR portions of this aim involve data only.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
41,843
The ATC intervention offers convenient access to specialty consultation for PCPs and offers patients direct access to addiction treatment in a non-stigmatized primary care setting
Kaiser Permanente
Oakland, California, United States
Kaiser Permanente
San Francisco, California, United States
Implementation Outcomes
AUD Medication Prescription Rate
Time frame: 2 years
Implementation Outcomes
Rates of referrals to specialty addiction treatment
Time frame: 2 years
AUD Medication Fills
AUD Medication Fills
Time frame: 2 years
Addiction Treatment Initiation Rate
Addiction Treatment Initiation Rate
Time frame: 2 years
Alcohol use (quantity/frequency)
Alcohol use (quantity/frequency)
Time frame: 2 years
Rates of referral to specialty Addiction Medicine department
Specialty addiction treatment referrals
Time frame: 2 years
Rates of emergency department utilization in the intervention arms
Health Service Utilization
Time frame: 2 years
Rates of inpatient services utilization in the intervention arms
Health Service Utilization
Time frame: 2 years
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