Abstract

BackgroundOpioid addiction and overdose are epidemic in the U.S. Victims of traumatic injury are at greater than average risk for opioid misuse and related complications. Potential risk screens and preventive interventions in this clinical population remain under-investigated. The current project seeks to develop and pilot the implementation of a screening tool for opioid risk at American College of Surgeons (ACS) Level I and Level II trauma centers.MethodsThe project began with an online survey, which was sent to Wisconsin trauma center medical directors and trauma coordinators for the purpose of gathering information on current substance use screening practices. Next, a focus group of trauma center staff was convened to discuss barriers and facilitators to screening, resources available and needed to support trauma patients with opioid use disorders, and measurable clinical observations that could indicate a patient’s potential risk for opioid misuse. Data from the surveys and focus group were combined to inform the data collection instruments that are currently being administered to patients recruited from the University of Wisconsin Hospital Trauma Inpatient and Orthopedic Surgery Services. Eligible and consenting patients complete standardized measures of socio-demographics, substance use history, opioid misuse risk, mental health, medical history, and injury and pain severity. Follow up visits at weeks 4, 12, and 24 after hospital discharge assess hypothesized risk factors for opioid addiction and opioid use disorder diagnosis. At the completion of patient data collection, a forward stepwise regression will identify factors of most significant risk of the development of opioid use disorder after traumatic injury. This modeling will inform the development of a novel opioid risk screening tool, which will undergo pilot implementation at 4 Wisconsin ACS Level I and Level II trauma centers, using an evidence-based implementation strategy with roots in systems engineering.DiscussionPositive findings from the proposed work would lead to improved, standardized opioid risk screening practices among victims of traumatic injury. The ultimate goal of this and future work is to reduce the likelihood of opioid misuse, addiction, and related complications, such as overdose and death.Trial registration Clinicaltrials.gov registration number: NCT02861976. Date of registration: Feb 9, 2016

Highlights

  • Opioid addiction and overdose are epidemic in the U.S Victims of traumatic injury are at greater than average risk for opioid misuse and related complications

  • Primary aims Aim 1 In a sample of traumatic injury victims (n = 295) at an American College of Surgeons, Level I trauma center, collect data on hypothesized risk factors for opioid misuse after traumatic injury, and monitor for the development of opioid use disorder during the 24 weeks follow up period

  • The prediction model will be constructed based on a forward step-wise logistic regression model building process with threshold for entry into the model of significantly improving the model at a 0.05 significance level

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Summary

Methods

These data were used to finalize the items that are currently being administered to inpatients receiving trauma services (n = 295) at an ACS Level-1 trauma center in Wisconsin These data will be analyzed and used for the development and validation of a screening tool for opioid use disorder risk after traumatic injury. Implementation work will begin with observations of the UW Hospital Trauma Inpatient Service clinical workflows regarding the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT-C), a standardized alcohol use screening tool, a process which will inform potential implementation procedures for the opioid risk screen [32, 33] This observation period will focus on when, where, and who is administering the AUDIT-C, how the information obtained from the AUDIT-C is recorded and communicated to the clinical care team, if and how that information guides clinical care decisions, and if and how an intervention or referral to treatment is conducted with. Focus groups will seek to compare the experience of clinicians at sites that successfully implemented the opioid screening protocol into their workflow compared to those at sites that did not

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