| Literature DB >> 27687632 |
Marie-Louise Mares1, David H Gustafson2, Joseph E Glass3, Andrew Quanbeck2, Helene McDowell4, Fiona McTavish2, Amy K Atwood3, Lisa A Marsch5, Chantelle Thomas6, Dhavan Shah7, Randall Brown8, Andrew Isham2, Mary Jane Nealon9, Victoria Ward10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Millions of Americans need but don't receive treatment for substance use, and evidence suggests that addiction-focused interventions on smart phones could support their recovery. There is little research on implementation of addiction-related interventions in primary care, particularly in Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs) that provide primary care to underserved populations. We used mixed methods to examine three FQHCs' implementation of Seva, a smart-phone app that offers patients online support/discussion, health-tracking, and tools for coping with cravings, and offers clinicians information about patients' health tracking and relapses. We examined (a) clinicians' initial perspectives about implementing Seva, and (b) the first year of implementation at Site 1.Entities:
Keywords: Addiction; Behavioral health care; Primary care; mHealth
Year: 2016 PMID: 27687632 PMCID: PMC5043521 DOI: 10.1186/s12911-016-0365-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Inform Decis Mak ISSN: 1472-6947 Impact factor: 2.796
Fig. 1Main menu of Seva on patients’ smartphones
Fig. 2Mockup of clinician report showing hypothetical patient profiles
Characteristics of research sites
| Site 1 | Site 2 | Site 3 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Madison, WI | Missoula, MT | Bronx, NY | |
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| Patient Characteristics | |||
| Number of Patients Served Prior Year | 25,062 | 9,087 | 6,677 |
| % White | 60.5 | 91.0 | 3.4 |
| % African American | 25.4 | 1.0 | 32.2 |
| % Asian | 5.4 | 1.0 | 0.8 |
| % American Indian/Alaska Native | 8.2 | 5.0 | 0.4 |
| % Hispanic | 26.7 | 3.5 | 58.2 |
| % Other | 2.0 | ||
| Provider Characteristics | |||
|
| 30 | 42 | 13 |
|
| 3 (10 %) | 25 | 0 |
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| 40 | 32 | 14 |
|
| 4 (10 %) | 1 | 1 |
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| 10 | 8 | 11 |
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| 10 (100 %) | 4 | 5 |
| Clinic Characteristics | |||
| Medical and behavioral health care co-located | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Warm handoffs to behavioral health staff | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Substance use disorder focus | Medical & BHC team focused on substance use | Addiction & mental health support group | Addiction & mental health support group |
| Setting | Midwest US, mid-size city | Western State, small city hub for rural-frontier counties | East Coast, US Metropolitan |
Data collection matrix
| Method/data source | Study population | Participants and number of sessions |
|---|---|---|
| Studying Clinicians’ Initial Expectations at All Three Sites | ||
| Meetings/Focus Group Discussions | Clinic Staff | - Behavioral health care providers with high volume of patients with substance use disorders |
| Clinic Staff | - Medical &/or behavioral health care providers with varied volume of patients with substance use disorders | |
| In-Depth Individual Interviews | Clinic Staff | - Administration: 1–2 interviews per site |
| Research Team Meeting Notes | Clinician champions of Seva on research team | - 15 meetings of 5–9 researchers, including two clinicians from Site 1, and occasional call-ins from clinicians from Sites 2 and 3. |
| Studying First Year Implementation Experiences at Site 1 | ||
| Meetings toward the end of the first year | Clinic staff at first site | - Medical & behavioral health care providers with varied use of Seva: 1 session |
| In-Depth individual interviews toward the end of the first year | Clinic staff at first site | - Physician with no use of Seva: 1 interview |
| Computer Data on Clinician Use of Report | Clinic staff at first site | - Log-in data from 17 clinicians participating in study |
| Research Team Meeting Notes | Clinician champions of Seva on research team | - 20 meetings of 5–9 researchers, including two clinicians from 1st site |
| Computer Data on Patient Use of Seva | Patients at first site | - Log-in data from 97 patients |
Note. All consented clinicians or administrative stakeholders participated in at least one of the above forms of data collection. The number of participants at each session varied
Core themes in clinicians’ initial concerns about implementing Seva
| Qualitative Themes ( | Exemplar Quotations |
|---|---|
| Concerns about workflow and time | |
| Fitting it in to the workflow (10) | We’re so busy here. What’s the right workflow? How do we interface the systems? Don’t make me log in to another system, don’t send me an email attachment, don’t make me open a document. How will this fit into the huddle? |
| Difficult to engage physicians (8) | I’ve talked to [some doctors] but they’re pretty overwhelmed right now… Medical providers have so many pieces they use right now, I just don’t think that they would log on. |
| Having time for Seva (7) | I’m in a storm and can’t really see out of the storm. I worry about having another thing added if I don’t get extra time carved out for it. |
| Encourage needy patients (4) | I worry that this is going to increase burden on staff. Some of these patients are in bad shape and out of control. I worry they will use the phones to hound the staff even more. |
| Other initiatives compete for time & energy (3) | A lot of things start to happen and then don’t stick. Some pan out and some don’t… We were going to be involved in a brain mapping system and that didn’t pan out because of funding and logistics. And we’re very close to contracting with a casino upstate to be gambling treatment providers. And, 2015, we have a big depression care initiative. And we have to meet the demands of all these licensing bodies. |
| Concerns about legal obligations & liability | |
| Possible unanswered suicidality on the discussion board (5) | I could be held liable. I could lose my license. I am uncomfortable with the idea of giving out the phone and not getting this information directly…People who are not me making clinical decisions about my patients. If one of our patients were to do something self-injurious, I would be thoroughly investigated, and this is never far from my mind. |
| Patients understand what clinicians can see (4) | Particularly when there are possible disclosures about substance use that have not previously been shared with the medical team and place them at risk based on their current medication regimen (someone is disclosing heavy benzo use while on suboxone for one example)… I want to be upfront for their protection and for ours-it’s my license if I’m documenting stuff. |
| Concerns about patients’ use of Seva | |
| Not use Seva or misuse the phone (6) | My biggest fear is patients not using or misusing the system. That they’d just be signing up to get a free phone and then they’d be pawning it or that they’d throw it in the river. |
| Toxic interactions on discussion board (6) | Particularly when individuals are reaching out during low moments, their pre-existing negative emotional valence may be inadvertently infused into their interpretation of the messages and statements they are reading, particularly if the messages are ambiguous, have multiple meanings, or are written poorly. |
Core themes in clinicians’ initial expectations of benefits of implementing Seva
| Qualitative Themes ( | Exemplar Quotations |
|---|---|
| Seva as a resource for patients | |
| With few other sobriety resources (6) | Missoula has nothing long term for patients with substance use issues. There’s only one 4-bed share house. Turning Point, the only outpatient program has a long waiting list. There’s nothing else in town. People basically have AA or [the clinic’s] sobriety group. And for people who live further out of town in a small community, or on the reservations? This is something we can offer them. |
| As a tool for learning and insight (5) | Their lack of language to talk about emotions is really profound. They can’t explain what happened, don’t know how to tune into different feelings, so they turn to substances. A powerful part of the process is teaching them how to recognize emotions and providing them with options. So just filling out the BAM [Brief Alcohol Monitoring Scale… on Seva] is a powerful tool. |
| Who need an alternative to group meetings (5) | Often they want to be alone-they’re often living in shelters that are very chaotic, and they just want peace and quiet…. So Seva would allow them to interact without really being part of a group. They can get their toe in the water. |
| To experience constant availability of sobriety support (4) | Often a patient is trying to reach out to me but I’m busy and won’t get the message till five hours later. I really like that in the meantime, the phone can help them with their breathing exercises or he can listen to a podcast to help him figure out why he shouldn’t relapse, and that’s great. |
| At key transitions (4) | This has so many positive possibilities. Like being able to help people coming out of rehab, or from mental health inpatient, or coming out of jail and they need that support to help them now they’re back in the community. |
| Clinician Report as a resource for clinicians | |
| More efficient appointments (10) | If they can be filling out the PHQ [Patient Health Questionnaire] ahead of time on the phone, and if I can see that, that saves me a ton of time. That can make our meetings a lot more efficient. |
| Prompt primary care conversations about addiction (6) | Addictions are so often kept secretive in a medical visit, being able to talk about it is really important. If we could give it to the medical provider, it would be really good. It could start the conversation. |
| Mobile phone as a resource | |
| For patients (5) | Having a phone helps them move into housing, they can call the hotline phone number at the homeless shelter, people can be calling in for help with issues. |
| For clinic (5) | So many of these patients don’t have voicemail, don’t have a phone system. Now suddenly we can access them. It suddenly lets us have contact… so we could remind them, “oh you’ve got this appointment” or we can reach out, “hey, just checking in.” |
Fig. 3Patients’ use of Seva at site 1, reported by patients’ week on study