| Literature DB >> 33145691 |
Joseph W Frank1,2, Amy S B Bohnert3,4, Friedhelm Sandbrink5,6,7, Marsden McGuire8, Karen Drexler8,9,10.
Abstract
Evidence-based treatment of opioid use disorder, the prevention of opioid overdose and other opioid-related harms, and safe and effective pain management are priorities for the Veterans Health Administration (VHA). The VHA Office of Health Services Research and Development hosted a State-of-the-Art Conference on "Effective Management of Pain and Addiction: Strategies to Improve Opioid Safety" on September 10-11, 2019. This conference convened a multidisciplinary group to discuss and achieve consensus on a research agenda and on implementation and policy recommendations to improve opioid safety for Veterans. Participants were organized into three workgroups: (1) managing opioid use disorder; (2) Long-term opioid therapy and opioid tapering; (3) managing co-occurring pain and substance use disorder. Here we summarize the implementation and policy recommendations of each workgroup and highlight important cross-cutting issues related to telehealth, care coordination, and stepped care model implementation.Entities:
Keywords: chronic pain; health policy; opioid use disorder
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33145691 PMCID: PMC7609348 DOI: 10.1007/s11606-020-06295-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Gen Intern Med ISSN: 0884-8734 Impact factor: 5.128
Implementation and Policy Recommendations
| Goal | Specific recommendations |
|---|---|
| Managing opioid use disorder | |
| 1. Increase access to MOUD | • Provide same-day access to MOUD at every VHA facility and support medical management of OUD across clinical settings • Ensure that psychosocial treatment is available but not a pre-requisite for medication treatment • Clarify regulations around tele-prescribing of MOUD • Mandate overdose event reporting with the Suicide Behavior and Overdose Report and require timely follow-up following an overdose |
| 2. Improve provider knowledge and comfort to provide MOUD | • Develop national SUD consultation program modeled after existing VHA programs in PTSD and suicide risk management • Disseminate provider and patient educational resources |
| 3. Improve fidelity to evidence-based models of MOUD | • Standardize monitoring of substance use during OUD treatment • Replace administrative discharges for substance use with evidence-based treatment of co-occurring SUDs |
| Long-term opioid therapy and opioid tapering | |
| 1. Support evidence-based, patient-centered approaches to opioid therapy and opioid tapering | • Avoid initiation of high-dose long-term opioid therapy for chronic pain • Individualize assessment of risks and benefits and individualize implementation of opioid dose reduction • Align communication about VHA policy for Veterans, their families/caregivers, healthcare teams and leadership |
| 2. Provide system-wide access to team-based care | • Offer multidisciplinary care with more frequent follow-up during opioid dose reduction |
| 3. Ensure access to assessment and treatment for OUD | • Recommend against abrupt discontinuation of opioid medications due to concern for OUD without facilitating transition to OUD treatment |
| Managing co-occurring pain and substance use disorder | |
| 1. Improve access to evidence-based non-pharmacologic treatments | • Disseminate evidence-based combined psychological interventions for co-occurring disorders • Disseminate evidence-based interventions for chronic pain (e.g., cognitive behavioral therapy, movement therapies) |
MOUD, medications for opioid use disorder; OUD, opioid use disorder; PTSD, post-traumatic stress disorder; SUD, substance use disorder; VHA, Veterans Health Administration