William C Becker1, Kristin M Mattocks2, Joseph W Frank3, Matthew J Bair4, Rebecca L Jankowski5, Robert D Kerns6, Jacob T Painter7, Brenda T Fenton8, Amanda M Midboe9, Steve Martino6. 1. Pain Research, Informatics, Multimorbidities and Education (PRIME) Center, VA Connecticut Healthcare System, United States; Yale School of Medicine, United States. Electronic address: william.becker@yale.edu. 2. VA Central Western Massachusetts Healthcare System, United States; University of Massachusetts Medical School, United States. 3. VA Eastern Colorado Healthcare System, HSR&D Center for Veteran-Centered and Value-Driven Care, Denver, CO, United States; University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, CO, United States. 4. Richard L. Roudebush VA Medical Center, HSR&D Center for Health Information and Communication, United States; Indiana University School of Medicine and Regenstrief Institute, United States. 5. VA Central Western Massachusetts Healthcare System, United States. 6. Pain Research, Informatics, Multimorbidities and Education (PRIME) Center, VA Connecticut Healthcare System, United States; Yale School of Medicine, United States. 7. Central Arkansas Veterans Healthcare System, United States; University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, United States. 8. Pain Research, Informatics, Multimorbidities and Education (PRIME) Center, VA Connecticut Healthcare System, United States. 9. VA Palo Alto Health Care System, United States.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Opioid prescribing and subsequent rates of serious harms have dramatically increased in the past two decades, yet there are still significant barriers to reduction of risky opioid regimens. This formative evaluation utilized a mixed-methods approach to identify barriers and factors that may facilitate the successful implementation of Primary Care-Integrated Pain Support (PIPS), a clinical program designed to support the reduction of risky opioid regimens while increasing the uptake of non-pharmacologic treatment modalities. METHODS: Eighteen Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) employees across three sites completed a survey consisting of the Organizational Readiness for Implementing Change (ORIC) scale; a subset of these individuals (n = 9) then completed a semi-structured qualitative phone interview regarding implementing PIPS within the VA. ORIC results were analyzed using descriptive statistics while interview transcripts were coded and sorted according to qualitative themes. RESULTS: Quantitative analysis based on ORIC indicated high levels of organizational readiness to implement PIPS. Interview analysis revealed several salient themes: system-level barriers such as tension among various pain management providers; patient-level barriers such as perception of support and tension between patient and provider; and facilitating factors of PIPS, such as the importance of the clinical pharmacist role. CONCLUSIONS: While organizational readiness for implementing PIPS appears high, modifications to our implementation facilitation strategy (e.g., establishing clinical pharmacists as champions; marketing PIPS to leadership as a way to improve VA opioid safety metrics) may improve capacity of the sites to implement PIPS successfully. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
INTRODUCTION: Opioid prescribing and subsequent rates of serious harms have dramatically increased in the past two decades, yet there are still significant barriers to reduction of risky opioid regimens. This formative evaluation utilized a mixed-methods approach to identify barriers and factors that may facilitate the successful implementation of Primary Care-Integrated Pain Support (PIPS), a clinical program designed to support the reduction of risky opioid regimens while increasing the uptake of non-pharmacologic treatment modalities. METHODS: Eighteen Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) employees across three sites completed a survey consisting of the Organizational Readiness for Implementing Change (ORIC) scale; a subset of these individuals (n = 9) then completed a semi-structured qualitative phone interview regarding implementing PIPS within the VA. ORIC results were analyzed using descriptive statistics while interview transcripts were coded and sorted according to qualitative themes. RESULTS: Quantitative analysis based on ORIC indicated high levels of organizational readiness to implement PIPS. Interview analysis revealed several salient themes: system-level barriers such as tension among various pain management providers; patient-level barriers such as perception of support and tension between patient and provider; and facilitating factors of PIPS, such as the importance of the clinical pharmacist role. CONCLUSIONS: While organizational readiness for implementing PIPS appears high, modifications to our implementation facilitation strategy (e.g., establishing clinical pharmacists as champions; marketing PIPS to leadership as a way to improve VA opioid safety metrics) may improve capacity of the sites to implement PIPS successfully. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
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