| Literature DB >> 32885178 |
Sarah J Shoemaker-Hunt1, Leigh Evans1, Holly Swan1, Olivia Bacon1, Brooke Ike2, Laura-Mae Baldwin2, Michael L Parchman3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Six Building Blocks for improving opioid management (6BBs) is a program for improving the management of patients in primary care practices who are on long-term opioid therapy for chronic pain. The 6BBs include building leadership and consensus; aligning policies, patient agreements, and workflows; tracking and monitoring patient care; conducting planned, patient-centered visits; tailoring care for complex patients; and measuring success. The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality funded the development of a 6BBs implementation guide: a step-by-step approach for independently implementing the 6BBs in a practice. This mixed-method study seeks to assess practices' use of the implementation guide to implement the 6BBs and the effectiveness of 6BBs implementation on opioid management processes of care among practices using the implementation guide.Entities:
Keywords: Chronic pain management; Evaluation design; Opioid management; Practice redesign; Prescribing practices; Primary care; Quality improvement
Year: 2020 PMID: 32885178 PMCID: PMC7427954 DOI: 10.1186/s43058-020-00008-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Implement Sci Commun ISSN: 2662-2211
Fig. 1Six Building Blocks: a team-based approach to improving opioid management in primary care. Note: Graphic retrieved from https://depts.washington.edu/fammed/improvingopioidcare/6-building-blocks/
Participating health care organization characteristics
| Health care organization | US census division | Location | No. of clinical sites† | Organization characteristics | Experience with opioid management | Opioid prescribing rate per 100 (county)* | Opioid OD death rate per 100,000 (state)** |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Org. 1 | Pacific | Rural | 4 | • Multispecialty group practice • Serves about 72,000 patients • Community hospital subsidiary | • Currently participating in Medicaid transformation project on 6BBs | 90.4 | 9.4 |
| Org. 2 | Pacific | Urban | 13 | • Federally Qualified Health Center (FQHC) • Patient-centered medical home (PCMH) • Community-based nonprofit organization • Serves about 30,000 patients; over 50% of patients have Medicaid coverage | • Familiar with 6BBs • Has a system-wide, cross discipline policy including prescribing guidelines, refill policy, and MAT referrals/treatment • Interested in self-service approach to tweak what is already in place | 56.8 | 9.7 |
| Org. 3 | Pacific | Urban | 1 | • University affiliated • Part of a health system • 50% of patients are racial/ethnic minorities | • Has done a lot of work but not streamlined • Has been developing opioid policy | 27.1 | 5.3 |
| Org. 4 | Mountain | Urban | 1 | • Privately owned primary care practice • PCMH • Recognized as an exemplar practice by other initiatives | • Has conducted work around opioid management for years, including efforts to stratify patients according to opioid abuse risk | 47.2 | 9.5 |
| Org. 5 | Mountain | Rural | 4 | • FQHC • PCMH • High percentage of patients on Medicare/Medicaid • 22 total clinic sites in the system | • Seeking alternative pain management practices for providers • Due to limited availability of pain management specialists, many primary care providers prescribe | 111.8 | 11.4 |
| Org. 6 | East North Central (Midwest) | Urban | 6 | • FQHC • University affiliated • 80% of patients have Medicaid coverage | • Does not do a lot of new prescribing of opioids but faces challenges managing inherited patients on opioids | 37.2 | 15.3 |
| Org. 7 | East North Central (Midwest) | Urban | 1 | • Hospital-owned, family medicine residency program • PCMH • Part of a health system | • Has worked on implementing components of the 6BBs including workflows, policies, and patient agreements | 61.8 | 32.9 |
| Org. 8 | East North Central (Midwest) | Urban | 1 | • Residency clinic • University affiliated | • Has guidelines from hospital and some of the pieces already in place in the residency program • Current opioid education is focused on risk management | 50.1 | 32.9 |
| Org. 9 | East South Central | Rural | 6 | • Regional hospital with outreach clinics. 16 total clinic sites in the system • PCMH | • Started an opioid stewardship committee and wants to include best practices in building this program • Has worked on policies and patient agreements and now wants to focus on tracking/monitoring. | 96.9 | 23.6 |
| Org. 10 | Mid-Atlantic | Rural | 2 | • Graduate medical education safety-net consortium • Serves about 17,500 patients • PCMH • Part of a health system; 9 total clinic sites in system | • Has conducted prior work on opioid prescribing and aims to improve further | 97.3 | 18.5 |
| Org. 11 | Mid-Atlantic | Urban | 1 | • Hospital-owned, family medicine residency clinic • Serves about 22,000 patients • University affiliated • Part of a health system | • Has worked on implementing components of the 6BBs for several years, but sees an opportunity to improve | 42.7 | 15.1 |
†This is the number of clinical sites in the organization participating in implementing the Six Building Blocks. This is not necessarily the total number of clinical sites in the health system/organization
*County-level rate of retail opioid prescriptions dispensed per 100 people. Obtained from Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, US County Prescribing Rates, 2017, available at https://www.cdc.gov/drugoverdose/maps/rxcounty2017.html; national average prescribing rate in 2017 was 58.7 prescriptions per 100 persons
**Opioid-related overdose deaths per 100,000. Obtained from the National Institute of Drug Abuse, State Opioid Related Overdose Death Rates, 2016, available at https://www.drugabuse.gov/drugs-abuse/opioids/opioid-summaries-by-state; national average opioid-related overdose deaths in 2016 was 13.3 deaths per 100,000 persons
Data sources
| Source | Unit of observation | Type | Domains/content | Frequency |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Semi-structured staff interviews | QI leads, clinical champions, key staff involved in implementation | Qualitative | Adaptability, complexity, design quality and packaging, execution* Barriers and facilitators to implementation Adoption, acceptability, feasibility, appropriateness, sustainability** Lessons learned | At study startup, midway through, and end |
| Call notes/emails | Health care organizations | Qualitative | Barriers and facilitators to implementation Adaptability, acceptability, feasibility** | Ongoing |
| Practice documents | Health care organizations | Qualitative | Intermediate outcomes and care processes (6BBs): Opioid prescribing policies and procedures, clinical workflows, dashboards, patient registries, patient agreements, training and education offerings, opioid tracking and monitoring reports, care plan templates, patient educational materials, screening tools related to opioid management, referral processes between primary care and behavioral health and/or pain specialists | Ongoing |
| Clinical staff survey | Clinical staff: primary care providers, behavioral health providers, nurses, social workers, medical assistants | Quantitative | Penetration** Engagement in implementation Prescribing self-efficacy (prescribers only) Burnout Adaptive reserve*** | At study startup and 12 months later |
| 6BBs Milestones worksheet | Health care organizations | Quantitative | Adoption and fidelity** | At study startup, midway through, and end |
| Opioid quality improvement measures | Clinics within health care organizations | Quantitative | Effectiveness measures (CDC Guideline): • Proportion of patients on long-term opioid therapy prescribed ≥ 90 MMEs per day • Proportion of patients on long-term opioid therapy co-prescribed a benzodiazepine • Proportion of patients with a new opioid prescription for chronic pain with documentation that a prescription drug monitoring program was checked prior to prescribing • Proportion of patients with a new opioid prescription for chronic pain with documentation that a urine drug test was performed prior to prescribing | Quarterly for study duration |
*The Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research. 2019. Available from https://cfirguide.org/constructs/
**Proctor et al. [19]
***Jaén et al. [23]