Performance measure can improve quality of care at the patient, provider, and systems level of care, and patient-reported outcome measures bring a needed patient-centered focus. Recovery has been difficult to measure for people with substance use disorders, and is more challenging in the context of opioid use disorders (OUD) and treatment medications. This study will examine a recovery patient-reported outcome measure to determine if patients and clinicians find it useful and acceptable in the clinical context, and if it leads to improved outcomes.
The pilot clinical trial will test the newly developed Recovery Patient-Reported Outcome Measure ("Recovery PROM") and approach with patients and clinicians in an office-based opioid medication treatment program (known as office-based opioid treatment (OBOT), medication-assisted treatment (MAT) or medications for OUD (MOUD)), in the specific context of buprenorphine treatment. Aims This is a pilot study to assess the feasibility of implementing the Recovery PROM into the workflow of a clinical setting, assess its initial effectiveness, and evaluate its value to patients and clinicians. The aims are as follows: 1. Work with a clinical partner to assess and refine the draft Recovery PROM, and examine feasibility and implementation (e.g., workflow, data transfer issues) related to its use in a clinical setting. 2. Determine initial effectiveness of the Recovery PROM for improving patient outcomes (self-efficacy, health-related quality of life, patient-provider relationship, social determinants of health, substance use) and facilitating self-directed care and patient-centered shared decision-making. 3. Evaluate and update (if needed) the Recovery PROM in terms of recovery while on OUD medication treatment, patient characteristics, and clinical workflow. Hypotheses Although this pilot study is primarily for information gathering, and ultimately refinement of the Recovery PROM and approach, the study has two broad hypotheses. H1. Patients and clinicians will find the Recovery PROM to be a useful tool for patient recovery. H2. Patient self-efficacy, shared decision-making, patient-provider relationship, and health-related quality of life will improve and substance use will decrease with the use of the Recovery PROM.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
100
A Recovery Patient-Reported Outcome Measure (PROM, 19 items and 2 questions for each item, collected via online survey) will be completed by eligible patients at baseline and again at months 3 and 6. The initial Recovery PROM will be shared with the clinician, at the visit most closely scheduled following the baseline visit, for review and discussion with the patient. At the 3- and 6-month visits, the clinician will be asked to re-review and compare the earlier Recovery PROM(s) as well as the current Recovery PROM. The clinician is encouraged to use the PROM results during interim clinical visits with the patient. Efforts will be made to contemporaneously track how often the PROM is discussed in clinical sessions conducted during the 6 months.
Stanley Street Resources and Treatment
Fall River, Massachusetts, United States
Change in reported health related quality of life (4-point scale), assessed via CDC HRQOL questionnaire
Centers for Disease Control \& Prevention (CDC) Health Related Quality of Life (HRQOL) questionnaire, single item ranging from excellent (score=1) to poor (score=5).
Time frame: 3 months after baseline, 6 months after baseline
Change in number of days mental/physical health were not good (in past 30 days), assessed via CDC HRQOL questionnaire.
CDC Health Related Quality of Life (HRQOL) questionnaire, separate items for mental and physical health, single item measuring the number of days out of 30, where 0 is no days (better) and 30 is daily (worse).
Time frame: 3 months after baseline, 6 months after baseline
Change in reported self-efficacy for managing chronic conditions, assessed via PROMIS Self-Efficacy measure
Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) Self-Efficacy scale, a series of 10 questions each on a 5-point scale, ranging from not at all confident (score=1) to very confident (score=5).
Time frame: 3 months after baseline, 6 months after baseline
Change in patient-clinician alliance, assessed via WAI-SR
Working Alliance Inventory-Short Revised (WAI-SR): Patient-clinician alliance for tasks and goals of treatment, and effective relationship. This scale is a series of 12 items, with responses ranging from seldom (score=1) to always (score=5).
Time frame: 3 months after baseline, 6 months after baseline
Social determinants of health, assessed via PRAPARE
Protocol for Responding to and Assessing Patient Assets, Risks, and Experiences (PRAPARE). The prepare is a series of independent questions related to social determinants of health; it is not scored.
Time frame: 3 months after baseline, 6 months after baseline
Substance use past 30 days, assessed via modified ASI Alcohol and Drug module
Modified Alcohol and Drug module of the Addiction Severity Index (ASI). The ASI asks how many days in the past 30 each substance was used, where 0 is no use (better) and 30 days is daily use (worse).
Time frame: 3 months after baseline, 6 months after baseline
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