Results From the POINT Pragmatic Randomized Trial: An Emergency Department-Based Peer Support Specialist Intervention to Increase Opioid Use Disorder Treatment Linkage and Reduce Recurrent Overdose

被引:2
|
作者
Watson, Dennis P. [1 ]
Tillson, Martha [2 ]
Taylor, Lisa [1 ]
Xu, Huiping [3 ]
Ouyang, Fangqian [3 ]
Beaudoin, Francesca L. [4 ]
O'Donnell, Daniel [5 ]
McGuire, Alan B. [6 ,7 ]
机构
[1] Chestnut Hlth Syst, Lighthouse Inst, 221 W Walton St, Chicago, IL 60610 USA
[2] Univ Kentucky, Ctr Drug & Alcohol Res, Lexington, KY USA
[3] Indiana Univ Sch Med, Dept Biostat & Hlth Data Sci, Indianapolis, IN USA
[4] Brown Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Epidemiol, Providence, RI USA
[5] Indiana Univ Sch Med, Dept Emergency Med, Indianapolis, IN USA
[6] Indiana Univ Purdue Univ Indianapolis, Dept Psychol, Indianapolis, IN USA
[7] Richard L Roudebush VAMC, Hlth Serv Res & Dev, Indianapolis, IN USA
来源
SUBSTANCE USE & ADDICTION JOURNAL | 2024年 / 45卷 / 03期
关键词
opioid use disorder; overdose; peer support; emergency department; opioid poisoning; medications for opioid use disorder; BUPRENORPHINE; NALOXONE;
D O I
10.1177/29767342231221054
中图分类号
R194 [卫生标准、卫生检查、医药管理];
学科分类号
摘要
Background: People with opioid use disorder (OUD) frequently present at the emergency department (ED), a potentially critical point for intervention and treatment linkage. Peer recovery support specialist (PRSS) interventions have expanded in US-based EDs, although evidence supporting such interventions has not been firmly established. Methods: Researchers conducted a pragmatic trial of POINT (Project Planned Outreach, Intervention, Naloxone, and Treatment), an ED-initiated intervention for harm reduction and recovery coaching/treatment linkage in 2 Indiana EDs. Cluster randomization allocated patients to the POINT intervention (n = 157) versus a control condition (n = 86). Participants completed a structured interview, and all outcomes were assessed using administrative data from an extensive state health exchange and state systems. Target patients (n = 243) presented to the ED for a possible opioid-related reason. The primary outcome was overdose-related ED re-presentation. Key secondary outcomes included OUD medication treatment linkage, duration of medication in days, all-cause ED re-presentation, all-cause inpatient re-presentation, and Medicaid enrollment. All outcomes were assessed at 3-, 6-, and 12-months post-enrollment. Ad hoc analyses were performed to assess treatment motivation and readiness. Results: POINT and standard care participants did not differ significantly on any outcomes measured. Participants who presented to the ED for overdose had significantly lower scores (3.5 vs 4.2, P < .01) regarding readiness to begin treatment compared to those presenting for other opioid-related issues. Conclusions: This is the first randomized trial investigating overdose outcomes for an ED peer recovery support specialist intervention. Though underpowered, results suggest no benefit of PRSS services over standard care. Given the scope of PRSS, future work in this area should assess more recovery- and harm reduction-oriented outcomes, as well as the potential benefits of integrating PRSS within multimodal ED-based interventions for OUD.
引用
收藏
页码:378 / 389
页数:12
相关论文
共 10 条
  • [1] Randomised clinical trial of an emergency department-based peer recovery support intervention to increase treatment uptake and reduce recurrent overdose among individuals at high risk for opioid overdose: study protocol for the navigator trial
    Goedel, William C.
    Marshall, Brandon D. L.
    Samuels, Elizabeth A.
    Brinkman, Mark G.
    Dettor, Debra
    Langdon, Kirsten J.
    Mahoney, Linda A.
    Merchant, Roland C.
    Nizami, Tarek
    O'Toole, George A.
    Ramsey, Susan E.
    Yedinak, Jesse L.
    Beaudoin, Francesca L.
    [J]. BMJ OPEN, 2019, 9 (11):
  • [2] Emergency department-based peer support for opioid use disorder: Emergent functions and forms
    McGuire, Alan B.
    Powell, Kristen Gilmore
    Treitler, Peter C.
    Wagner, Karla D.
    Smith, Krysti P.
    Cooperman, Nina
    Robinson, Lisa
    Carter, Jessica
    Ray, Bradley
    Watson, Dennis P.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF SUBSTANCE ABUSE TREATMENT, 2020, 108 : 82 - 87
  • [3] Implementation of planned outreach, intervention, naloxone, and treatment (POINT): an emergency department-based program to prevent fatal opioid overdose
    McGuire, Alan
    Watson, Dennis
    Brucker, Krista
    [J]. IMPLEMENTATION SCIENCE, 2018, 13
  • [4] Implementation of planned outreach, intervention, naloxone, and treatment (POINT): an emergency department-based program to prevent fatal opioid overdose
    McGuire, Alan
    Watson, Dennis
    Brucker, Krista
    [J]. IMPLEMENTATION SCIENCE, 2017, 13
  • [5] A brief telephone-delivered peer intervention to encourage enrollment in medication for opioid use disorder in individuals surviving an opioid overdose: Results from a randomized pilot trial
    Winhusen, Theresa
    Wilder, Christine
    Kropp, Frankie
    Theobald, Jeff
    Lyons, Michael S.
    Lewis, Daniel
    [J]. DRUG AND ALCOHOL DEPENDENCE, 2020, 216
  • [6] User centered clinical decision support to implement initiation of buprenorphine for opioid use disorder in the emergency department: EMBED pragmatic cluster randomized controlled trial
    Melnick, Edward R.
    Nath, Bidisha
    Dziura, James D.
    Casey, Martin F.
    Jeffery, Molly M.
    Paek, Hyung
    Soares, William E.
    Hoppe, Jason A.
    Rajeevan, Haseena
    Li, Fangyong
    Skains, Rachel M.
    Walter, Lauren A.
    Patel, Mehul D.
    Chari, Srihari, V
    Platts-Mills, Timothy F.
    Hess, Erik P.
    D'Onofrio, Gail
    [J]. BMJ-BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL, 2022, 377
  • [7] Emergency department-based efforts to offer medication treatment for opioid use disorder: What can we learn from current approaches?*,**
    Stewart, Maureen T.
    Coulibaly, Neto
    Schwartz, Daniel
    Dey, Judith
    Thomas, Cindy Parks
    [J]. JOURNAL OF SUBSTANCE ABUSE TREATMENT, 2021, 129
  • [8] A randomized clinical trial of strengths-based case management to link emergency department patients to opioid use disorder treatment
    Bogenschutz, Michael P.
    McCormack, Ryan
    Rapp, Richard
    Meyers-Ohki, Sarah
    Mennenga, Sarah E.
    Regis, Amber
    Kolaric, Rhonda
    Glisker, Richard
    Greco, Peter P.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF SUBSTANCE ABUSE TREATMENT, 2022, 138
  • [9] Correlates of nonfatal overdose among treatment-seeking individuals with non-heroin opioid use disorder: Findings from a pragmatic, pan-Canadian, randomized control trial
    Crepeault, Hannah
    Ti, Lianping
    Jutras-Aswad, Didier
    Wood, Evan
    Le Foll, Bernard
    Lim, Ron
    Bach, Paxton
    Brar, Rupinder
    Socias, M. Eugenia
    [J]. JOURNAL OF SUBSTANCE USE & ADDICTION TREATMENT, 2023, 155
  • [10] Health Evaluation and Referral Assistant: A Randomized Controlled Trial of a Web-Based Screening, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Treatment System to Reduce Risky Alcohol Use Among Emergency Department Patients
    Haskins, Brianna L.
    Davis-Martin, Rachel
    Abar, Beau
    Baumann, Brigitte M.
    Harralson, Tina
    Boudreaux, Edwin D.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF MEDICAL INTERNET RESEARCH, 2017, 19 (05)