PLoS ONE (Jan 2022)

Improving screening, treatment, and intervention for unhealthy alcohol use in primary care through clinic, practice-based research network, and health plan partnerships: Protocol of the ANTECEDENT study.

  • Amrita N Singh,
  • Victoria Sanchez,
  • Erin S Kenzie,
  • Eliana Sullivan,
  • James L McCormack,
  • Jean Hiebert Larson,
  • Alissa Robbins,
  • Tiffany Weekley,
  • Brigit A Hatch,
  • Caitlin Dickinson,
  • Nancy C Elder,
  • John P Muench,
  • Melinda M Davis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0269635
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 6
p. e0269635

Abstract

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BackgroundUnhealthy alcohol use (UAU) is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in the United States, contributing to 95,000 deaths annually. When offered in primary care, screening, brief intervention, referral to treatment (SBIRT), and medication-assisted treatment for alcohol use disorder (MAUD) can effectively address UAU. However, these interventions are not yet routine in primary care clinics. Therefore, our study evaluates tailored implementation support to increase SBIRT and MAUD in primary care.MethodsANTECEDENT is a pragmatic implementation study designed to support 150 primary care clinics in Oregon adopting and optimizing SBIRT and MAUD workflows to address UAU. The study is a partnership between the Oregon Health Authority Transformation Center-state leaders in Medicaid health system transformation-SBIRT Oregon and the Oregon Rural Practice-based Research Network. We recruited clinics providing primary care in Oregon and prioritized reaching clinics that were small to medium in size (DiscussionThis study will explore how primary care clinics implement SBIRT and MAUD in routine practice and how practice facilitators vary implementation support across diverse clinic settings. Findings will inform how to effectively align implementation support to context, advance our understanding of practice facilitator skill development over time, and ultimately improve detection and treatment of UAU across diverse primary care clinics.