Abstract

BackgroundMeasurement-based care (MBC) is the practice of routinely administering standardized measures to support clinical decision-making and monitor treatment progress. Despite evidence of its effectiveness, MBC is rarely adopted in routine substance use disorder (SUD) treatment settings and little is known about the factors that may improve its adoptability in these settings. The current study gathered qualitative data from SUD treatment clinicians about their perceptions of MBC, the clinical outcomes they would most like to monitor in MBC, and suggestions for the design and implementation of MBC systems in their settings.MethodsFifteen clinicians from one publicly-funded and two privately-funded outpatient SUD treatment clinics participated in one-on-one research interviews. Interviews focused on clinicians’ perceived benefits, drawbacks, and ideas related to implementing MBC technology into their clinical workflows. Interviews were audio recorded, transcribed, and coded to allow for thematic analysis using a mixed deductive and inductive approach. Clinicians also completed a card sorting task to rate the perceived helpfulness of routinely measuring and monitoring different treatment outcomes.ResultsClinicians reported several potential benefits of MBC, including improved patient-provider communication, client empowerment, and improved communication between clinicians. Clinicians also expressed potential drawbacks, including concerns about subjectivity in patient self-reports, limits to personalization, increased time burdens, and needing to learn to use new technologies. Clinicians generated several ideas and preferences aimed at minimizing burden of MBC, illustrating clinical changes over time, improving ease of use, and improving personalization. Numerous patient outcomes were identified as “very helpful” to track, including coping skills, social support, and motivation for change.ConclusionsMBC may be a beneficial tool for improving clinical care in SUD treatment settings. MBC tools may be particularly adoptable if they are compatible with existing workflows, help illustrate gradual and nonlinear progress in SUD treatment, measure outcomes perceived as clinically useful, accommodate multiple use cases and stakeholder groups, and are framed as an additional source of information meant to augment, rather than replace, existing practices and information sources.

Highlights

  • Measurement-based care (MBC) is the practice of routinely administering standardized measures to support clinical decision-making and monitor treatment progress

  • Measurement-based care (MBC), which is the practice of routinely measuring and reviewing treatment progress using standardized measures, can help patients and clinicians understand whether an individual patient is responding to treatment [4, 5] and can help inform clinical decision-making regarding the current course of treatment

  • The current study explored how MBC systems can be optimized for substance use disorder (SUD) treatment settings by drawing on the expertise of frontline clinicians in SUD treatment settings

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Summary

Introduction

Measurement-based care (MBC) is the practice of routinely administering standardized measures to support clinical decision-making and monitor treatment progress. Despite evidence of its effectiveness, MBC is rarely adopted in routine substance use disorder (SUD) treatment settings and little is known about the factors that may improve its adoptability in these settings. Measurement-based care (MBC), which is the practice of routinely measuring and reviewing treatment progress using standardized measures, can help patients and clinicians understand whether an individual patient is responding to treatment [4, 5] and can help inform clinical decision-making regarding the current course of treatment. A recent review highlighted several clinician-level barriers that impede the use of MBC in mental health treatment, including increased burden in workflows, negative attitudes toward MBC, and concerns that some outcome measures may not be relevant to patients [13]. Developing MBC systems that are perceived by SUD treatment clinicians as beneficial, minimally burdensome, and relevant to the clinical care of patients may improve adoptability and implementation success, potentially leading to improved outcomes and better quality of care for patients [4,5,6]

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