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Active NON-SBIR/STTR RPGS NIH (US)

External Facilitation to Increase Prescribing of AUD Medications in the Psychiatric Setting

$3.01M USD

Funder NATIONAL INSTITUTE ON ALCOHOL ABUSE AND ALCOHOLISM
Recipient Organization University of Maryland Baltimore
Country United States
Start Date Sep 25, 2024
End Date Aug 31, 2027
Duration 1,070 days
Number of Grantees 2
Roles Principal Investigator; Co-Investigator
Data Source NIH (US)
Grant ID 11036698
Grant Description

ABSTRACT Patients with major mental illness (MMI; major depressive, bipolar, schizophrenia spectrum, other psychotic disorders; posttraumatic stress disorder) are diagnosed with alcohol use disorder (AUD) at higher rates than the general population and experience negative consequences and long-term suffering as a result. There are FDA

approved medications for AUD (MAUD) that have demonstrated efficacy. That these medications are underutilized in MMI patients with comorbid AUD represents a gap in care: evidence-based AUD treatments exist but MMI patients – many from marginalized racial, ethnic, and SES groups - are largely excluded from benefiting from them. In primary

care and mental health settings, prescribers report that MAUD is best provided in specialty addictions service settings even though it is hard to connect with these services for MMI patients. However, the psychiatric treatment setting can easily offer MAUD. Many MMI patients are highly connected to their psychiatry treatment providers. They are taking

psychiatric medications prescribed by their psychiatry treatment team; MAUD could easily be offered and monitored in this context. APA practice guidelines state that MAUD can have efficacy outside of specialty addictions services. Services in psychiatry treatment settings are provided by a team in which prescribers focus on medication treatments

in brief monthly appointments and non-prescribing clinicians provide psychosocial interventions in more frequent appointments. Implementing a process that identifies patients, educates them on MAUD, prescribes MAUD and monitors use, and integrates MAUD with other psychotherapies offers the best chance for increasing MMI patients’

access to MAUD. This project will pilot test an implementation facilitation (IF) intervention to increase MAUD education and prescribing for MMI/AUD patients in three psychiatry treatment clinics. Guided by the integrated Promoting Action on Research Implementation in Health Services (i-PARIHS) framework, an external facilitator will work with each clinics’

internal champion to (1) provide clinic level education on MAUD in non-specialty care settings, (2) provide clinic level training in using a standardized AUD screen, documenting screening results in the EHR, and documenting AUD diagnosis in the EHR, (3) help internal champions use an audit and feedback system for weekly review of MAUD

education and prescribing, (4) help internal champions do weekly care coordination of MMI/AUD patients, and (5) make educational materials on MAUD available on site to MMI patients so they are informed about these treatment options. Internal champions and clinics will have access to consultation from a MAUD clinician expert. These activities

will take place across pre-implementation and implementation phases and will be followed by a post-IF sustainment period during which clinics and champions continue implementation on their own. Formative Evaluation activities will take place throughout; at the end of the sustainment phase, MAUD outcomes will be assessed.

All Grantees

University of Maryland Baltimore

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