Difference between revisions of "Expand Early Intervention in Communities for Substance Use Disorder"

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''Return to [[Opioid_Top-Level_Strategy_Map|Opioid Top-Level Strategy Map]]''
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''Return to&nbsp;[[Opioid_Top-Level_Strategy_Map|Top-Level Strategy Map]]''
  
 
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Early interventions can help people how have started to misuse opioid make choices that help them avoid developing a dependence that can lead to a full Opioid Use Discorder or other form of SUD.&nbsp;
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<span id="docs-internal-guid-baf91879-7fff-d447-92b3-943abd0f34fa" style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:400; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">The goals of early intervention are to reduce the harms associated with substance use, to reduce risk behaviors before they lead to injury, to improve health and social function, and to prevent progression to a disorder and subsequent need for specialty substance use disorder services. Early intervention consists of providing information about substance use risks, normal or safe levels of use, and strategies to quit or cut down on use and use-related risk behaviors, and facilitating patient initiation and engagement in treatment when needed. Early intervention services may be considered the bridge between prevention and treatment services. For individuals with more serious substance misuse, intervention in these settings can serve as a mechanism to engage them into treatment.<ref name="Facing Addiction in America: The Surgeon General's Spotlight on Opioids">https://addiction.surgeongeneral.gov/sites/default/files/OC_SpotlightOnOpioids.pdf</ref></span>
  
&nbsp;
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= Background =
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<span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:400; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">The 2018 National Survey on Drug Use and Healt</span><span style="font-size: 11pt; font-family: Arial; color: rgb(0, 0, 0); font-weight: 400; font-style: normal; font-variant: normal; text-decoration: none; vertical-align: baseline; white-space: pre-wrap">h<ref>https://www.samhsa.gov/data/sites/default/files/cbhsq-reports/NSDUHNationalFindingsReport2018/NSDUHNationalFindingsReport2018.pdf</ref></span><span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:400; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">reported on the continued use of substances across the U.S.&nbsp;</span>
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<ul style="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;">
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<li><span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:400; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">In 2018, approximately 20.3 million people aged 12 or older had a substance use disorder (SUD) related to their use of alcohol or illicit drugs in the past year, including 14.8 million people who had an alcohol use disorder and 8.1 million people who had an illicit drug use disorder.&nbsp;</span></li>
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<li><span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:400; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">The most common illicit drug use disorder was marijuana use disorder (4.4 million people). An estimated 2.0 million 1.7 million people with a prescription pain reliever use disorder and 0.5 million people with a heroin use disorder.<ref>https://www.samhsa.gov/data/sites/default/files/cbhsq-reports/NSDUHNationalFindingsReport2018/NSDUHNationalFindingsReport2018.pdf</ref></span></li>
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</ul>
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== <span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:700; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">Goals of Early Intervention</span> ==
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<span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:400; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">Early intervention reduces the harm associated with substance use, reduces risk behaviors before they lead to injury, improves health and social function, and prevents progression to a disorder and subsequent need for specialty substances use disorder services. Early intervention consists of providing information about substance use risks, normal or safe levels of use, and strategies to quit or cut down on use and use-related risk behaviors, and facilitating patient initiation and engagement in treatment when needed.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>
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== <span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:700; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">Prevention vs. Early Intervention</span> ==
  
&nbsp;
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<span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:400; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">Early intervention differs from Prevention efforts, especially when it comes to general and at-risk populations. </span><span style="font-size:10pt; font-family:Verdana; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:400; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">Prevention targets the general population with a universal need to understand the risks of substance use disorder.&nbsp; While Early Intervention efforts can also engage the general population, it focuses on age groups, individuals, or families at risk for particular disorders like substance use, or those who may have just started experimenting or using substances.</span>
  
= Background =
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== <span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:700; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">Early Intervention in a Community Setting</span> ==
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<ul style="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;">
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<li><span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:400; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">Early intervention can be provided when an individual presents for another medical condition or social service need and is not seeking treatment for a substance use disorder.</span></li>
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<li><span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:400; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">Community intervention can involve multi-sector partnerships, community leaders and&nbsp; members, and/or deliver services in community settings such as clinics, schools, jails, workplaces, emergency rooms, social services, senior citizen centers, or campuses.<ref>https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6440941/
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</ref></span></li>
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</ul>
  
The 2014 National Survey on Drug Use and Health<ref>https://www.samhsa.gov/data/sites/default/files/NSDUH-FRR1-2014/NSDUH-FRR1-2014.pdf</ref>&nbsp;demonstrated that opioid misuse is more widespread than realized:
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== <span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:700; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">At-Risk Populations Who Should Receive Early Intervention</span> ==
  
*Approximately 1.9 million Americans met criteria for prescription painkillers use disorder based on their use of prescription painkillers in the past year.
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<span style="font-size:10pt; font-family:Verdana; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:400; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">While the entire community can benefit from early intervention resources, there are populations that have been identified at a high risk for substance use.</span>
*1.4 million people used prescription painkillers non-medically for the first time in the past year.
 
*The average age for first-time prescription painkiller misuse was 21.2 years old.  
 
  
(as cited by the [http://(As%20cited%20by%20the%20 Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration]).
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*<span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:400; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">Adolescents or adults at risk or who show signs of substance use or are experimenting with substances.</span>
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*<span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:400; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">Individuals who have suffered childhood trauma.</span><ref>https://www.acesconnection.com/
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</ref>
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*<span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:400; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">Binge drinkers: In 2018, about 139.8 million Americans aged 12 or older were past month alcohol users, 67.1 million were binge drinkers in the past month. About 2.2 million adolescents aged 12 to 17 drank alcohol in the past month, and 1.2 million of these adolescents binge drank in that period.</span><span style="font-size: 11pt; font-family: Arial; color: rgb(0, 0, 0); font-weight: 400; font-style: normal; font-variant: normal; text-decoration: none; vertical-align: baseline; white-space: pre-wrap"><ref>https://www.samhsa.gov/data/sites/default/files/cbhsq-reports/NSDUHNationalFindingsReport2018/NSDUHNationalFindingsReport2018.pdf</ref></span>
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*<span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:400; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">People who use substances while driving.</span>
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*<span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:400; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">Expectant mothers who use substances while pregnant.&nbsp;</span>
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*<span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:400; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">Senior citizens.</span>
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*<span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:400; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">Ethnic minorities who may not be receiving culturally relevant care</span>
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*<span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:400; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">Individuals with co-occurring substance use and mental disorders</span>
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*<span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:400; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">Homeless population.</span>
  
= Intervention =
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== <span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:700; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">Components of Early Intervention:</span> ==
  
*Intervention can be an effective means for getting someone to accept treatment.<ref>Hazelden Betty Ford Foundation. Heroin and Prescription Painkillers: A Toolkit for Community Action. 2016</ref>  
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*<span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:400; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">Screening, Brief Intervention and Referral to Treatment, or SBIRT&nbsp; <ref>http://ifi-wikis.com/IFI-OpioidCrisis/Expand_SBIRT_Program</ref></span>
*Interventions are most successful when conducted with the help of addiction experts and when users are coming down from a high.<ref>Hazelden Betty Ford Foundation. Heroin and Prescription Painkillers: A Toolkit for Community Action. 2016</ref>  
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*<span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:400; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">Screen for risk factors for substance use such as childhood trauma and ACEs</span><ref>https://www.acesconnection.com/</ref>
*During an intervention, close friends and family members tell their loved one how their drug use has affected them personally, and the person is presented with the opportunity to seek treatment.<ref>Hazelden Betty Ford Foundation. Heroin and Prescription Painkillers: A Toolkit for Community Action. 2016</ref>  
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*<span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:400; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">Reduce Stigma in Community </span><span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:400; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap"><ref>http://ifi-wikis.com/IFI-OpioidCrisis/Reduce_Stigma</ref></span>  
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*<span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:400; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">Pre-Arrest Diversion Programs <ref>https://ptaccollaborative.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/SAFE-Pre-Arrest-Guide_Final-.pdf
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</ref></span>  
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*<span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:400; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">“Reachable Moments”,&nbsp; such as providing patient education when prescribing opioids for chronic pain.<ref>https://news.ohsu.edu/2018/04/25/hospital-staff-experience-sea-change-in-addressing-substance-use-disorder</ref></span>
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*<span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:400; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">Utilize Prescription Drug Monitoring Programs (PDMPs)<ref>https://www.asam.org/resources/publications/magazine/public-policy-statements/2018/04/24/prescription-drug-monitoring-programs-(pdmps)</ref> which are state-controlled electronic databases to track controlled substance prescriptions within a state. PDMPs&nbsp; also provide prescribing and patient behavior information to prescribers and other authorities who are granted access to the information.</span>  
  
 
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&nbsp;
  
= Case Studies =
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= Promising Programs =
  
 
== Project Engage - Delaware ==
 
== Project Engage - Delaware ==
  
Project Engage is an early intervention and referral to substance use disorder treatment program designed to help hospital patients who may be struggling with alcohol or drug use. Project Engage collaborates with hospital staff to identify and connect patients with community-based substance use disorder treatment programs and other resources. Project Engage has also formed a partnership with the construction industry to offer recovery support to employees from participating construction companies.
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<span id="docs-internal-guid-857cae61-7fff-0c74-fce2-ae34a5c60b91" style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:700; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">Project Engage - Delaware<ref> https://christianacare.org/services/behavioralhealth/project-engage/
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</ref></span>
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<span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:400; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">ChristianaCare is a Delaware-based health system, centered on improving health outcomes, making high-quality care more accessible and lowering health care costs.&nbsp; Designed to help hospital patients who may be struggling with alcohol or drug use, Project Engage provides early intervention and referrals to substance use disorder treatment. Project Engage integrates peers in recovery, who are called engagement specialists, into the clinical setting in the hospital to meet with patients at their bedside about their alcohol or drug use. Project Engage collaborates with hospital staff to identify and connect patients with community-based substance use disorder treatment programs and other resources. Project Engage has also formed a partnership with the construction industry to offer recovery support to employees from participating construction companies.</span>
  
&nbsp; As part of the initiative, its founder, Dr. Terry Horton, worked to make questions about opioid use standard protocol for patients admitted to the ER. The goal is to identify patients going through withdrawal very quickly in order to treat it rapidly and break the vicious cycle they're in by immediately administering drugs like Suboxone. Health care workers also pair patients with addiction counselors and get them enrolled in community-based drug treatment program before they've even left the hospital. And so far, Christiana Care has been able to steer two-thirds of patients with opioid addiction into drug treatment.<ref>https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2017/11/22/563815531/asking-about-opioids-a-treatment-plan-can-make-all-the-difference</ref>
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== <span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:700; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">OhioSTART (Sobriety, Treatment, and Reducing Trauma)<ref>https://ohiostart.org/ https://www.pcsao.org/programs/ohio-star
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</ref></span> ==
  
&nbsp; Project Engage integrates peers in recovery, who are called Engagement Specialists, into the clinical setting in the hospital to meet with patients at their bedside about their alcohol and/or drug use. The Engagement Specialists learn about the patient’s goals and coordinate treatment options that support the patient’s needs. The Engagement Specialists use motivational interviewing to empower each patient in the decision-making process, assisting them to take that critical first step to seek help for their substance use. Project Engage Social Workers are experts in community resources, in obtaining access to facilities in the area and in assisting the team to overcome barriers so patients can receive care and transition into treatment.
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<span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:400; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">The state of Ohio developed OhioSTART to help families dealing with substance use disorder avoid disruptive and costly out-of-home placements and helps keep families together. For parents who have lost custody of their children to foster care or another government-approved living arrangement,&nbsp; the goal is to ultimately reunify and stabilize these families. The intervention program provides specialized victim services, such as intensive trauma counseling, to children who have suffered victimization with substance use of a parent being the primary risk factor. Additionally, the program assists those parents of those children with mentors who have firsthand experience with substance use disorder.&nbsp;</span>
  
&nbsp; Simply put, Project Engage goes beyond just screening people. It treats opioid addiction as a disease, with medicine and in-house specialists, which is not common in screening programs, nor the American health system in general. The programs founders agree: the best way to curb opioid addiction is to connect patients directly with treatment, instead of leaving it up to patients to follow up on referrals, which is typically how it's done.<ref>https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2017/11/22/563815531/asking-about-opioids-a-treatment-plan-can-make-all-the-difference</ref>
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== <span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:700; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">Project IMPACT, Portland, OR<ref>https://news.ohsu.edu/2018/04/25/hospital-staff-experience-sea-change-in-addressing-substance-use-disorder
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</ref></span> ==
  
&nbsp; In addition to working with the patient and the hospital clinical team, Project Engage also works with treatment providers and insurers to develop a discharge plan to achieve the best possible outcome for each patient. After leaving the hospital and engaging in treatment, patients may have the opportunity to continue to work with an Engagement Specialist to help them stay engaged in their treatment.
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<span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:400; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">Oregon Health and Science University (OHSU) and its partners conducted a needs assessment to map patient and system needs to critical intervention components and develop a business case. Using their findings, the group identified issues address in addiction treatment and intervention:</span>
  
&nbsp; Learn more about Project Engage here: [https://christianacare.org/services/behavioralhealth/project-engage/ Project Engage]<br/> &nbsp;
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<span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:400; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">1. Hospitalization is a “reachable” moment: A survey of hospitalized adults conducted by OHSU revealed that 68% of high-risk drug users reported wanting to cut back or quit. Many patients also reported that they wanted to initiate medication-assisted treatment (MAT) while hospitalized, and that they wanted providers that understand addiction.</span>
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<span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:400; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">2. Lack of usual pathways to treatment: OHSU Hospital lacked established referral pathways to outpatient addiction care, and wait times were often long.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>
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<span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:400; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">Their findings resulted in an innovative intervention program: Project IMPACT, or the Improving Addiction Care Team</span><span style="font-size:13.999999999999998pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:400; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">. </span><span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:400; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">IMPACT includes two complementary components: First, an inpatient consult service giving patients a safe place to share their stories, while improving patient engagement and trust while expanding inpatient treatment options.&nbsp; Second, partnerships with community providers to create rapid access pathways to treatment and create a smooth transition to MAT.</span>
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&nbsp; &nbsp;
  
 
= Tools + Resources =
 
= Tools + Resources =
  
[[TR_-_Increase_Early_Interventions_for_People_Misusing_Drugs|TR_-_Increase_Early_Interventions_for_People_Misusing_Drugs]]
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<span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:700; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">The Police, Treatment, and Community Collaborative (PTACC)<ref>https://ptaccollaborative.org/</ref> </span><span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:400; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">is an alliance of practitioners in law enforcement, behavioral health, community, advocacy, research, and public policy, whose mission is to strategically widen community behavioral health and social service options available through law enforcement diversion. Their focus educates law enforcement and communities on pre-diversion for those who have committed nonviolent misdemeanors away from the criminal justice system and towards appropriate treatment or services can support these individuals, helping them avoid falling into the revolving door of the criminal justice system.&nbsp; Pre-arrest diversion provides law enforcement with an effective alternative through referral to community-based intervention</span><span style="font-size:13pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:400; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">.</span><span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:400; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap"><ref>https://ptaccollaborative.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/SAFE-Pre-Arrest-Guide_Final-.pdf</ref></span>
  
= Scorecard Building =
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<span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:700; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">Facing Addiction in America: The Surgeon General’s Spotlight on Opioids,</span><span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:400; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">&nbsp; “Importance&nbsp; of Prevention, Screening, Early Intervention, and Treatment<ref>https://addiction.surgeongeneral.gov/sites/default/files/OC_SpotlightOnOpioids.pdf</ref></span>
  
[[PO_-_Increase_Early_Interventions_for_People_Misusing_Drugs|Potential Objective Details]]<br/> [[PM_-_Increase_Early_Interventions_for_People_Misusing_Drugs|Potential Measures and Data Sources]]
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<span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:400; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">“Evidence-based interventions to prevent substance use, misuse and addiction target risk factors and enhance protective factors. Such interventions need to begin early in life to delay or prevent initiation of substance use and continue throughout the lifespan. For example, childhood trauma like adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) have been repeatedly linked to substance misuse. Primary prevention can also begin in the healthcare setting with prescribers using effective strategies to reduce overdoses involving prescription opioids such as safe prescribing practices. Currently, few primary care providers screen for or treat substance use disorders. Additionally, it is common for people who misuse opioids to misuse other substances or to have multiple substance use disorders, childhood trauma, or co-occurring physical and mental disorders. This highlights the need for full clinical assessment and comprehensive treatment services that are matched to an individual’s needs.”&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>
  
= Actions to Take =
+
'''Community Catalyst: Expanding Substance Use Prevention and Early Intervention in Schools''':<ref>https://www.communitycatalyst.org/resources/tools/sbirt-resources</ref>&nbsp; This online toolkit provides information and resources to mobilize communities to expand school-based services for substance use prevention and early intervention.&nbsp; Other resources describe a key set of tools for SBIRT early intervention plus strategies to implement and fund this intervention in schools and clinics.
  
[[PA_-_Increase_Early_Interventions_for_People_Misusing_Drugs|Actions for Coalitions]]<br/> &nbsp;
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<span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:700; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">Principles of Substance Abuse Prevention for Early Childhood, SAMHSA <ref>https://www.drugabuse.gov/publications/principles-substance-abuse-prevention-early-childhood/table-contents</ref></span>
  
= Resources to Investigate =
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<span style="font-size:11pt; font-family:Arial; color:#000000; background-color:transparent; font-weight:700; font-style:normal; font-variant:normal; text-decoration:none; vertical-align:baseline; white-space:pre; white-space:pre-wrap">Best Practices and Barriers to Engaging People with Substance Use Disorders in Treatment, HHS Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation, March 2019&nbsp;<ref>https://aspe.hhs.gov/pdf-report/best-practices-and-barriers-engaging-people-substance-use-disorders-treatment</ref></span>
  
[[RTI_-_Increase_Early_Interventions_for_People_Misusing_Drugs|More RTI on Increase Early Interventions for People Misusing Drugs]]<br/> <br/> '''<span style="color: #4d4d4d">PAGE MANAGER</span>:''' <span style="color: #ff0000">[insert name here]</span><br/> '''<span style="color: #4d4d4d">SUBJECT MATTER EXPERT</span>''': <span style="color: #ff0000">[fill out table below]</span>
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'''<span style="color: #4d4d4d">PAGE MANAGER</span>:''' <span style="color: #ff0000">[insert name here]</span>
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'''<span style="color: #4d4d4d">SUBJECT MATTER EXPERT</span>''': <span style="color: #ff0000">[fill out table below]</span>
  
 
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= Sources =
 
= Sources =
  
 
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#[https://www.reuters.com/article/us-addiction-methadone-cost/substituting-methadone-for-opioids-could-save-billions-idUSKBN1DK2LE https://www.reuters.com/article/us-addiction-methadone-cost/substituting-methadone-for-opioids-could-save-billions-idUSKBN1DK2LE]
 
#[https://www.reuters.com/article/us-addiction-methadone-cost/substituting-methadone-for-opioids-could-save-billions-idUSKBN1DK2LE https://www.reuters.com/article/us-addiction-methadone-cost/substituting-methadone-for-opioids-could-save-billions-idUSKBN1DK2LE]
 
#&nbsp;
 
#Hser YI, Evans E, Grella C, Ling W, Anglin, D. Long Term Course of Opioid Addiction. ''Harvard Review of Psychiatry.'' 2015 Mar-Apr;23(2):76-89.
 
##doi: 10.1097/HRP.0000000000000052.
 
##*[https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25747921 https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25747921]   
 
#Hser YI, Evans E, Grella C, Ling W, Anglin, D. Long Term Course of Opioid Addiction. ''Harvard Review of Psychiatry.'' 2015 Mar-Apr;23(2):76-89.
 
##doi: 10.1097/HRP.0000000000000052.
 
##*[https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25747921 https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25747921]   
 
</div> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div>
 
 
[[Category:SAFE-Full Spectrum Prevention]] [[Category:SAFE-Prescriptions and Medical Response]]
 
[[Category:SAFE-Full Spectrum Prevention]] [[Category:SAFE-Prescriptions and Medical Response]]

Latest revision as of 21:33, 28 June 2021

Return to Top-Level Strategy Map


The goals of early intervention are to reduce the harms associated with substance use, to reduce risk behaviors before they lead to injury, to improve health and social function, and to prevent progression to a disorder and subsequent need for specialty substance use disorder services. Early intervention consists of providing information about substance use risks, normal or safe levels of use, and strategies to quit or cut down on use and use-related risk behaviors, and facilitating patient initiation and engagement in treatment when needed. Early intervention services may be considered the bridge between prevention and treatment services. For individuals with more serious substance misuse, intervention in these settings can serve as a mechanism to engage them into treatment.[1]

Background

The 2018 National Survey on Drug Use and Health[2]reported on the continued use of substances across the U.S. 

  • In 2018, approximately 20.3 million people aged 12 or older had a substance use disorder (SUD) related to their use of alcohol or illicit drugs in the past year, including 14.8 million people who had an alcohol use disorder and 8.1 million people who had an illicit drug use disorder. 
  • The most common illicit drug use disorder was marijuana use disorder (4.4 million people). An estimated 2.0 million 1.7 million people with a prescription pain reliever use disorder and 0.5 million people with a heroin use disorder.[3]

Goals of Early Intervention

Early intervention reduces the harm associated with substance use, reduces risk behaviors before they lead to injury, improves health and social function, and prevents progression to a disorder and subsequent need for specialty substances use disorder services. Early intervention consists of providing information about substance use risks, normal or safe levels of use, and strategies to quit or cut down on use and use-related risk behaviors, and facilitating patient initiation and engagement in treatment when needed.  

Prevention vs. Early Intervention

Early intervention differs from Prevention efforts, especially when it comes to general and at-risk populations. Prevention targets the general population with a universal need to understand the risks of substance use disorder.  While Early Intervention efforts can also engage the general population, it focuses on age groups, individuals, or families at risk for particular disorders like substance use, or those who may have just started experimenting or using substances.

Early Intervention in a Community Setting

  • Early intervention can be provided when an individual presents for another medical condition or social service need and is not seeking treatment for a substance use disorder.
  • Community intervention can involve multi-sector partnerships, community leaders and  members, and/or deliver services in community settings such as clinics, schools, jails, workplaces, emergency rooms, social services, senior citizen centers, or campuses.[4]

At-Risk Populations Who Should Receive Early Intervention

While the entire community can benefit from early intervention resources, there are populations that have been identified at a high risk for substance use.

  • Adolescents or adults at risk or who show signs of substance use or are experimenting with substances.
  • Individuals who have suffered childhood trauma.[5]
  • Binge drinkers: In 2018, about 139.8 million Americans aged 12 or older were past month alcohol users, 67.1 million were binge drinkers in the past month. About 2.2 million adolescents aged 12 to 17 drank alcohol in the past month, and 1.2 million of these adolescents binge drank in that period.[6]
  • People who use substances while driving.
  • Expectant mothers who use substances while pregnant. 
  • Senior citizens.
  • Ethnic minorities who may not be receiving culturally relevant care
  • Individuals with co-occurring substance use and mental disorders
  • Homeless population.

Components of Early Intervention:

  • Screening, Brief Intervention and Referral to Treatment, or SBIRT  [7]
  • Screen for risk factors for substance use such as childhood trauma and ACEs[8]
  • Reduce Stigma in Community [9]
  • Pre-Arrest Diversion Programs [10]
  • “Reachable Moments”,  such as providing patient education when prescribing opioids for chronic pain.[11]
  • Utilize Prescription Drug Monitoring Programs (PDMPs)[12] which are state-controlled electronic databases to track controlled substance prescriptions within a state. PDMPs  also provide prescribing and patient behavior information to prescribers and other authorities who are granted access to the information.

 

Promising Programs

Project Engage - Delaware

Project Engage - Delaware[13]

ChristianaCare is a Delaware-based health system, centered on improving health outcomes, making high-quality care more accessible and lowering health care costs.  Designed to help hospital patients who may be struggling with alcohol or drug use, Project Engage provides early intervention and referrals to substance use disorder treatment. Project Engage integrates peers in recovery, who are called engagement specialists, into the clinical setting in the hospital to meet with patients at their bedside about their alcohol or drug use. Project Engage collaborates with hospital staff to identify and connect patients with community-based substance use disorder treatment programs and other resources. Project Engage has also formed a partnership with the construction industry to offer recovery support to employees from participating construction companies.

OhioSTART (Sobriety, Treatment, and Reducing Trauma)[14]

The state of Ohio developed OhioSTART to help families dealing with substance use disorder avoid disruptive and costly out-of-home placements and helps keep families together. For parents who have lost custody of their children to foster care or another government-approved living arrangement,  the goal is to ultimately reunify and stabilize these families. The intervention program provides specialized victim services, such as intensive trauma counseling, to children who have suffered victimization with substance use of a parent being the primary risk factor. Additionally, the program assists those parents of those children with mentors who have firsthand experience with substance use disorder. 

Project IMPACT, Portland, OR[15]

Oregon Health and Science University (OHSU) and its partners conducted a needs assessment to map patient and system needs to critical intervention components and develop a business case. Using their findings, the group identified issues address in addiction treatment and intervention:

1. Hospitalization is a “reachable” moment: A survey of hospitalized adults conducted by OHSU revealed that 68% of high-risk drug users reported wanting to cut back or quit. Many patients also reported that they wanted to initiate medication-assisted treatment (MAT) while hospitalized, and that they wanted providers that understand addiction.

2. Lack of usual pathways to treatment: OHSU Hospital lacked established referral pathways to outpatient addiction care, and wait times were often long.  

Their findings resulted in an innovative intervention program: Project IMPACT, or the Improving Addiction Care Team. IMPACT includes two complementary components: First, an inpatient consult service giving patients a safe place to share their stories, while improving patient engagement and trust while expanding inpatient treatment options.  Second, partnerships with community providers to create rapid access pathways to treatment and create a smooth transition to MAT.

   

Tools + Resources

The Police, Treatment, and Community Collaborative (PTACC)[16] is an alliance of practitioners in law enforcement, behavioral health, community, advocacy, research, and public policy, whose mission is to strategically widen community behavioral health and social service options available through law enforcement diversion. Their focus educates law enforcement and communities on pre-diversion for those who have committed nonviolent misdemeanors away from the criminal justice system and towards appropriate treatment or services can support these individuals, helping them avoid falling into the revolving door of the criminal justice system.  Pre-arrest diversion provides law enforcement with an effective alternative through referral to community-based intervention.[17]

Facing Addiction in America: The Surgeon General’s Spotlight on Opioids,  “Importance  of Prevention, Screening, Early Intervention, and Treatment[18]

“Evidence-based interventions to prevent substance use, misuse and addiction target risk factors and enhance protective factors. Such interventions need to begin early in life to delay or prevent initiation of substance use and continue throughout the lifespan. For example, childhood trauma like adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) have been repeatedly linked to substance misuse. Primary prevention can also begin in the healthcare setting with prescribers using effective strategies to reduce overdoses involving prescription opioids such as safe prescribing practices. Currently, few primary care providers screen for or treat substance use disorders. Additionally, it is common for people who misuse opioids to misuse other substances or to have multiple substance use disorders, childhood trauma, or co-occurring physical and mental disorders. This highlights the need for full clinical assessment and comprehensive treatment services that are matched to an individual’s needs.”  

Community Catalyst: Expanding Substance Use Prevention and Early Intervention in Schools:[19]  This online toolkit provides information and resources to mobilize communities to expand school-based services for substance use prevention and early intervention.  Other resources describe a key set of tools for SBIRT early intervention plus strategies to implement and fund this intervention in schools and clinics.

Principles of Substance Abuse Prevention for Early Childhood, SAMHSA [20]

Best Practices and Barriers to Engaging People with Substance Use Disorders in Treatment, HHS Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation, March 2019 [21]

 

PAGE MANAGER: [insert name here]

SUBJECT MATTER EXPERT: [fill out table below]

Reviewer   Date   Comments
         

     

Sources


  1. ^ https://addiction.surgeongeneral.gov/sites/default/files/OC_SpotlightOnOpioids.pdf
  2. ^ https://www.samhsa.gov/data/sites/default/files/cbhsq-reports/NSDUHNationalFindingsReport2018/NSDUHNationalFindingsReport2018.pdf
  3. ^ https://www.samhsa.gov/data/sites/default/files/cbhsq-reports/NSDUHNationalFindingsReport2018/NSDUHNationalFindingsReport2018.pdf
  4. ^ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6440941/
  5. ^ https://www.acesconnection.com/
  6. ^ https://www.samhsa.gov/data/sites/default/files/cbhsq-reports/NSDUHNationalFindingsReport2018/NSDUHNationalFindingsReport2018.pdf
  7. ^ http://ifi-wikis.com/IFI-OpioidCrisis/Expand_SBIRT_Program
  8. ^ https://www.acesconnection.com/
  9. ^ http://ifi-wikis.com/IFI-OpioidCrisis/Reduce_Stigma
  10. ^ https://ptaccollaborative.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/SAFE-Pre-Arrest-Guide_Final-.pdf
  11. ^ https://news.ohsu.edu/2018/04/25/hospital-staff-experience-sea-change-in-addressing-substance-use-disorder
  12. ^ https://www.asam.org/resources/publications/magazine/public-policy-statements/2018/04/24/prescription-drug-monitoring-programs-(pdmps)
  13. ^ https://christianacare.org/services/behavioralhealth/project-engage/
  14. ^ https://ohiostart.org/ https://www.pcsao.org/programs/ohio-star
  15. ^ https://news.ohsu.edu/2018/04/25/hospital-staff-experience-sea-change-in-addressing-substance-use-disorder
  16. ^ https://ptaccollaborative.org/
  17. ^ https://ptaccollaborative.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/SAFE-Pre-Arrest-Guide_Final-.pdf
  18. ^ https://addiction.surgeongeneral.gov/sites/default/files/OC_SpotlightOnOpioids.pdf
  19. ^ https://www.communitycatalyst.org/resources/tools/sbirt-resources
  20. ^ https://www.drugabuse.gov/publications/principles-substance-abuse-prevention-early-childhood/table-contents
  21. ^ https://aspe.hhs.gov/pdf-report/best-practices-and-barriers-engaging-people-substance-use-disorders-treatment