Literature DB >> 33339073

Building a hospital-based addiction medicine consultation service in Vancouver, Canada: the path taken and lessons learned.

Vivian Braithwaite1, Lianping Ti1,2, Nadia Fairbairn1,2, Keith Ahamad1,2, Mark McLean1,2, Scott Harrison1, Evan Wood1,2, Seonaid Nolan1,2.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: To improve evidence-based addiction care in acute care settings, many hospitals across North America are developing an inpatient addiction medicine consultation service (AMCS). St Paul's Hospital in Vancouver, Canada houses a large interdisciplinary AMCS. This study aimed to: (1) describe the current model of clinical care and its evolution over time; (2) evaluate requests for an AMCS consultation over time; (3) highlight the established clinical training opportunities and educational curriculum and (4) provide some lessons learned. DESIGN, SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS: A retrospective observational analysis in an urban, academic hospital in Vancouver, Canada with a large interdisciplinary AMCS, studied from 2013 to 2018, among individuals who presented to hospital and had a substance use disorder. MEASUREMENTS: Data were collected using the hospital's electronic medical records. The primary outcome was number of AMCS consultations over time.
FINDINGS: In 2014 the hospital's AMCS was restructured into an academic, interdisciplinary consultation service. A 228% increase in the number of consultations was observed between 2013 (1 year prior to restructuring) and 2018 (1373 versus 4507, respectively; P = 0.027). More than half of AMCS consultations originated from the emergency department, with this number increasing over time (55% in 2013 versus 74% in 2018). Referred patients were predominantly male (> 60% in all 5 years) between the ages of 45 and 65 years. Reasons for consultation remained consistent and included: opioids (33%), stimulants (30%), alcohol (23%) and cannabis use (8%).
CONCLUSIONS: After St Paul's Hospital in Vancouver, Canada was restructured in 2014 to a large, interdisciplinary addiction medicine consultation service (AMCS), the AMCS saw a 228% increase in the number of consultation requests with more than half of requests originating from the emergency department. Approximately two-thirds of consultation requests were for opioid or stimulant use.
© 2020 Society for the Study of Addiction.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Addiction medicine education; consultation service; hospitalized patient; inpatient management; opioid use disorder; substance use disorder

Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 33339073      PMCID: PMC8862688          DOI: 10.1111/add.15383

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Addiction        ISSN: 0965-2140            Impact factor:   7.256


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