| Literature DB >> 26016484 |
Todd Molfenter1, Mike Boyle2, Don Holloway3, Janet Zwick4.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Telemedicine use in addiction treatment and recovery services is limited. Yet, because it removes barriers of time and distance, telemedicine offers great potential for enhancing treatment and recovery for people with substance use disorders (SUDs). Telemedicine also offers clinicians ways to increase contact with SUD patients during and after treatment. CASE DESCRIPTION: A project conducted from February 2013 to June 2014 investigated the adoption of telemedicine services among purchasers of addiction treatment in five states and one county. The project assessed purchasers' interest in and perceived facilitators and barriers to implementing one or more of the following telemedicine modalities: telephone-based care, web-based screening, web-based treatment, videoconferencing, smartphone mobile applications (apps), and virtual worlds. DISCUSSION AND EVALUATION: Purchasers expressed the most interest in implementing videoconferencing and smartphone mobile devices. The anticipated facilitators for implementing a telemedicine app included funding available to pay for the telemedicine service, local examples of success, influential champions at the payer and treatment agencies, and meeting a pressing need. The greatest barriers identified were: costs associated with implementation, lack of reimbursement for telemedicine services, providers' unfamiliarity with technology, lack of implementation models, and confidentiality regulations. This paper discusses why the project participants selected or rejected different telemedicine modalities and the policy implications that purchasers and regulators of addiction treatment services should consider for expanding their use of telemedicine.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26016484 PMCID: PMC4636787 DOI: 10.1186/s13722-015-0035-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Addict Sci Clin Pract ISSN: 1940-0632
Telemedicine modalities & products
| Telemedicine modality | Products |
|---|---|
| Telephone-Based Care | |
| Post-Treatment Supports | Telephone-Based Continuing Care Program (Using McKay Model) [ |
| Web-Based | |
| Computerized Screening/Brief Intervention |
|
| Screening, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Treatment (SBIRT) [ | |
| Computerized Treatment | TES [ |
| Computerized Treatment Support | Recoveration |
| Videoconferencing | Dedicated videoconferencing equipment or video interface on personal computer with secure line (e-Psychiatry) [ |
| Smartphone Mobile Devices | A-CHESS [ |
| Virtual Worlds and Avatars | Virtual worlds developed by Innovation or Second Life |
Baseline telemedicine activities
| State | Technology | Function | Level of care | Level of Implementation (at Baseline) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| IA | • Telephone-based care (McKay’s Model) | • Facilitate distance treatment services for problem gambling and substance use disorders. | • Outpatient Treatment (Level I.0 and Level II.1) | Implemented in 14 state-funded programs providing SUD distance treatment. |
| • Web-based treatment system | • Provide access to treatment information anytime, anywhere | • Includes: | ||
| ○ Recovery Supports | ||||
|
○
| ○ Relapse Prevention | |||
|
○ Smartphone version of | ○ Continuing Care | |||
| ○ Family Education | ||||
| MD | Virtual World | Provide access to treatment services | • Outpatient Treatment (Level I.0 and Level II.1) | A pilot (n=7 providers) underway at baseline, with goals to expand |
| • Includes: | ||||
| ○ Recovery Supports | ||||
| ○ Relapse Prevention | ||||
| ○ Continuing Care | ||||
| MA | Smartphone Mobile Device with A-CHESS | • Provide access to recovery support information anytime, anywhere | • Includes: | 4 treatment providers in state were using at beginning of study period. |
| ○ Recovery Supports | ||||
| ○ Relapse Prevention | ||||
| ○ Continuing Care | ||||
| OK | Video-conferencing for providing psychiatric services | Access to psychiatric assessment, medication management, and consultation | • Outpatient Treatment (Level I.0 and Level II.1) | Conducted 120,000 visits in 2013 |
| San Mateo | None | |||
| South Carolina | None |
Telemedicine modalities and benefits
| Payer | Modalities Considered | Modalities Selected | Anticipated Benefits |
|---|---|---|---|
| Iowa | 1) Web-based Computerized Treatment System (Recoveration) | Web Portal (Recoveration) | Rural access |
| Greater engagement | |||
| Maryland | 1) Videoconferencing | Videoconferencing (telesuboxone) | Address opiate epidemic |
| 2) Virtual Worlds | Greater access to physician prescribers | ||
| Massachusetts | 1) Psychiatric videoconferencing (e-Psychiatry) | Mobile Device (A-CHESS) | Provision of Recovery Support |
| 2) Virtual Worlds | Web Screening (College Drinker’s Check-up) | Tertiary prevention and harm reduction among college students | |
| 3) Smartphone Mobile Device (A-CHESS) | |||
| 4) Web-based Computerized Treatment System (TES) | |||
| 5) Web Screening (SBIRT and Drinker’s Check-up) | |||
| Oklahoma | 1) Smartphone Mobile Devices (A-CHESS) | Smartphone Mobile Device (A-CHESS) | Greater engagement and extension of recovery support |
| 2) Web Based Computerized Treatment System (TES) | Expand videoconferencing for addiction services | ||
| 3) Web Screen (SBIRT) | |||
| 4) Virtual Worlds | |||
| 5) Psychiatric Videoconferencing (e-Psychiatry) | |||
| San Mateo County | 1) Videoconferencing (telepsychiatry, telesuboxone) | Videoconferencing (telesuboxone) | Greater access to physician prescribers |
| South Carolina | 1) Videoconferencing (psychiatry) | Videoconferencing (psychiatry) | Addressing identified disparities in access to specialized SUD care |
| 2) Smartphone Mobile Devices (A-CHESS) | Smartphone | ||
| 3) Web Based Computerized Treatment (Brief Intervention) | Mobile Devices (A-CHESS) | ||
| 4) Virtual Worlds | Improving collaboration between community partners | ||
| Provision of mobile recovery support |
Anticipated facilitators and barriers
| State | Technology | Facilitators | Barriers |
|---|---|---|---|
| Iowa | Web-based Computerized Treatment (Recoveration) | Initial funding through SAMSHA TCE Grant | Agency concerns with technology |
| NIATx Improvement Collaborative | Agency inexperience with technology | ||
| Treatment agency champion | |||
| Massachusetts | Smartphone Mobile Device (A-CHESS) | Existing example of successful application (A-CHESS) | Identifying start-up funding |
| Web Screening (Drinkers Check-up) | Potential case rate funding model | Lack of funding for reimbursement | |
| Concerns with meeting HIPAA & 42CFR regulations | |||
| Maryland | Videoconferencing (telesuboxone) | Strong champion (state governor) | Lack of willing and available MDs for suboxone prescribing |
| Limited funding for reimbursement | |||
| Limited models to follow | |||
| Oklahoma | Smartphone Mobile Device (A-CHESS) | Smartphone Mobile device start-up funding is available | Limited reimbursement model |
| Expanded Videoconferencing | Medicaid expansion covered clinical services for videoconferencing | ||
| San Mateo County | Videoconferencing (telesuboxone) | Demonstrated need for greater MD coverage to address opiate addictions | Competing priorities (ACA implementation) |
| Lack of start-up funding | |||
| Lack of funding for reimbursement | |||
| HIPAA compliance concerns | |||
| South Carolina | Videoconferencing (telepsychiatry & telesuboxone) | SSA Director Champion | Competing priorities (significant changes in environment) |
| Smartphone Mobile Device (A-CHESS) | Psychiatrist/ physician availability |