"Gold-standard" medications for opioid use disorder (MOUD) treatment combines FDA-approved medications, primarily methadone and buprenorphine, with behavioral therapies to provide "whole-patient" treatment. Prior to the pandemic, methadone and buprenorphine were subject to greater federal regulations than medications for other substance use disorders, including medication for alcohol use disorder (MAUD), which created barriers to MOUD initiation and retention. These barriers were exacerbated by physical distancing and diminished clinic capacities during the COVID-19 pandemic. To prevent healthcare disruption and expand access to MOUD treatment during the public health emergency, federal and state authorities implemented several MOUD policy changes during the pandemic to reduce barriers to MOUD initiation and retention, which subsequently became permanent. This study is an evaluation of the impacts of these policies on treatment use, retention, and patient outcomes pre- and post-MOUD policy implementation.
A mixed method study design will be implemented for this research study which has 3 specific aims. Aim 1. Examine the long-term effects of MOUD policy changes on MOUD receipt, coverage, retention, and receipt of behavioral therapy, relative to commensurate measures among patients with AUD. Aim 2. Examine the long-term effects of MOUD policy changes on outcomes for patients with OUD, including emergency department (ED) visits, inpatient hospitalization, substance use, relapse, and fatal and non-fatal overdoses, in contrast to pre-/post-period trends among our AUD comparison group. Aim 3. Contextualize longitudinal results using qualitative methods to examine the impacts of MOUD policy changes from the perspectives of veteran patients with OUD, MOUD providers, and the Veteran's Health Administration Substance Use Disorder (VHA SUD) treatment leadership, and actors influencing the reach, effectiveness, adoption, implementation, and maintenance of MOUD policy changes. For Aims 1 and 2, an observational cohort study will be conducted, using an interrupted time-series or difference-in-difference design to evaluate pre/post changes in treatment utilization and patient outcomes related to the nationwide MOUD policy changes introduced in 2020 expanding on access to MOUD treatment. The comparator for these analyses are patients with alcohol use disorder (AUD) for whom COVID-19 treatment disruptions applied but MOUD policies did not. Data will be sourced from the Veteran's Health Administration Corporate Data Warehouse (CDW), including notes and Veteran's Administrations (VA) Mortality Data Repository and Community Care (CC) data. Aim 3 is a qualitative aim for which we will interview VA MOUD providers, VA substance use disorder treatment leadership, and VA patients with OUD.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
185,810
Change in MOUD/MAUD Receipt
Based on Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) codes abstracted from the Veterans Administration VA Corporate Data Warehouse (CDW)
Time frame: 4 years pre/post policy change
Change in MOUD/MAUD Coverage
Based on Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) codes abstracted from the Veterans Administration VA Corporate Data Warehouse (CDW)
Time frame: 4 years pre/post policy change
Change in MOUD/MAUD Retention
Based on Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) codes abstracted from the Veterans Administration VA Corporate Data Warehouse (CDW)
Time frame: 4 years pre/post policy change
Change in Behavioral Therapy Receipt
Based on Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) codes abstracted from the Veterans Administration VA Corporate Data Warehouse (CDW)
Time frame: 4 years pre/post policy change
Change in Behavioral Therapy Count
Based on Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) codes abstracted from the Veterans Administration VA Corporate Data Warehouse (CDW)
Time frame: 4 years pre/post policy change
Change in any emergency department visits
Receipt of any vs none emergency department visits based on Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) codes abstracted from the Veterans Administration VA Corporate Data Warehouse (CDW)
Time frame: 4 years pre/post policy change
Change in the number of emergency department visits
The count of emergency department visits based on Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) codes abstracted from the Veterans Administration VA Corporate Data Warehouse (CDW)
Time frame: 4 years pre/post policy change
Change in any inpatient admissions
Receipt of any vs none inpatient admissions based on Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) codes abstracted from the Veterans Administration VA Corporate Data Warehouse (CDW)
Time frame: 4 years pre/post policy change
Change in the number of inpatient admissions
The count of inpatient admissions based on Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) codes abstracted from the Veterans Administration VA Corporate Data Warehouse (CDW)
Time frame: 4 years pre/post policy change
Change in any non-fatal Overdoses
Defined as the presence of \> International Classification of Diseases (ICD)-10 non-fatal overdose codes abstracted from the Veterans Administration VA Corporate Data Warehouse (CDW)
Time frame: 4 years pre/post policy change
Change in the count of non-fatal Overdoses
Based on non-fatal overdose codes abstracted from the Veterans Administration VA Corporate Data Warehouse (CDW)
Time frame: 4 years pre/post policy change
Change in Fatal Overdoses
Based on fatal overdose codes abstracted from the Veterans Administration VA Corporate Data Warehouse (CDW)
Time frame: 4 years pre/post policy change
Change in Substance Use
Documented in the electronic Health Record (EHR) and natural language processing large language models (NLP/LLM)
Time frame: 4 years pre/post policy change
Change in Substance Use Relapse
Documented in the electronic Health Record (EHR) and NLP/LLM
Time frame: 4 years pre/post policy change
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