Abstract

There is an urgent need for strategies to address the US epidemic of prescription opioid, heroin and fentanyl-related overdoses, misuse, addiction, and diversion. Evidence-based treatment such as medications for opioid use disorder (MOUD) are available but lack numbers of providers offering these services to meet the demands. Availability of electronic health record (EHR) systems has greatly increased and led to innovative quality improvement initiatives but this has not yet been optimized to address the opioid epidemic or to treat opioid use disorder (OUD). This report from a clinical decision support (CDS) working group convened by the NIDA Center for the Clinical Trials Network aims to converge electronic technology in the EHR with the urgent need to improve screening, identification, and treatment of OUD in primary care settings through the development of a CDS algorithm that could be implemented as a tool in the EHR. This aim is consistent with federal, state and local government and private sector efforts to improve access and quality of MOUD treatment for OUD, existing clinical quality and HEDIS measures for OUD or drug and alcohol use disorders, and with a recent draft grade B recommendation from the US Preventative Services Task Force (USPSTF) for screening for illicit drug use in adults when appropriate diagnosis, treatment and care services can be offered or referred. Through a face-to-face expert panel meeting and multiple follow-up conference calls, the working group drafted CDS algorithms for clinical care felt to be essential for screening, diagnosis, and management of OUD in primary care. The CDS algorithm was reviewed by addiction specialists and primary care providers and revised based on their input. A clinical decision support tool for OUD screening, assessment, and treatment within primary care systems may help improve healthcare delivery to help address the current epidemic of opioid misuse and overdose that has outpaced the capacity of specialized treatment settings. A semi-structured outline of clinical decision support for OUD was developed to facilitate implementation within the EHR. Further work for adaptation at specific sites and for testing is needed.

Highlights

  • In June 2015, the National Institute on Drug Abuse Center for the Clinical Trials Network held a full day workshop on the development of a clinical decision support tool (CDS) for opioid use disorder treatment.Bart et al Addict Sci Clin Pract (2020) 15:4The purpose of this meeting was to develop clinical decision support that will lend itself to incorporation into electronic health records (EHRs), and that could assist non-specialist medical providers to identify and manage patients with opioid use/misuse/disorder in general medical settings

  • This paper summarizes the final white paper reflecting the recommendations of the expert panel

  • In the primary care setting, we recommend using a brief negotiated interview (BNI) [29] format, which consists of raising the subject, providing feedback on the screening score, recommending cessation or reduction of opioid use, assessing readiness to change, and asking patients if they are ready to set a goal for changing their substance use

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Summary

Introduction

In June 2015, the National Institute on Drug Abuse Center for the Clinical Trials Network held a full day workshop on the development of a clinical decision support tool (CDS) for opioid use disorder treatment The purpose of this meeting was to develop clinical decision support that will lend itself to incorporation into electronic health records (EHRs), and that could assist non-specialist medical providers to identify and manage patients with opioid use/misuse/disorder in general medical settings. Following this full day meeting, a work group was created to sketch out what this CDS would entail. The development of a CDS support tool, which will serve precisely this purpose by supporting primary care providers in assessing and managing patients with OUD, is the centerpiece of this document

Background
Raise the subject
Conclusion
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