Implementation facilitation to promote emergency department-initiated buprenorphine for opioid use disorder: Protocol for a hybrid type iii effectiveness implementation study (Project ED HEALTH).
Patients with opioid use disorder (OUD) frequently present to the emergency department (ED) after overdose, or seeking treatment for medical conditions, their addiction, withdrawal symptoms, or complications from injection drug use, such as soft tissue infections. ED-initiated buprenorphine has been shown to be effective in increasing patient engagement in treatment compared with brief intervention with a facilitated referral or referral alone. However, adoption into practice has lagged behind need. To address this implementation change, we are evaluating the impact of implementation facilitation (IF) on the adoption of ED-initiated buprenorphine for OUD into practice.
This article describes a study that is being conducted through the NIDA Clinical Trials Network (CTN-0099). A hybrid type III effectiveness-implementation study design is being used to evaluate the effectiveness of a standard educational dissemination strategy versus IF on implementation (primary) and effectiveness (secondary) outcomes in four urban, academic EDs. Sites start with a standard 60-minute “Grand Rounds” educational intervention describing the prevalence of ED patients with OUD, the evidence for opioid agonist treatment and for innovative interventions with ED-initiated buprenorphine, followed by a 1-year baseline evaluation period.
Using a modified stepped wedge design, sites are randomly assigned to the IF intervention, which is guided by the Promoting Action on Research Implementation in Health Services (PARiHS) framework to assess evidence, context, and facilitation-related factors impacting the adoption of ED-initiated buprenorphine.
During the 6 months of IF through the 1-year IF evaluation period, external facilitators will work with local stakeholders to tailor and refine a bundle of activities to meet the site’s needs. The primary analyses will compare the baseline evaluation period to the IF evaluation period (n=120 patients with untreated OUD enrolled during each period) on (1) rates of provision of ED-initiated buprenorphine by ED providers with referral for ongoing medication (implementation outcome) and (2) rates of patient engagement in addiction treatment on the 30th day after the ED visit (effectiveness outcome). Finally, researchers will perform a cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) to determine if the effectiveness benefits are worth the additional costs.
Conclusions: The ED is rapidly being identified as a “24/7/365” site to combat the opioid crisis by offering access to medications for opioid use disorder treatment. Sustainable, evidence-based practice implementation is a complex and challenging process. This study has the potential to identify an implementation strategy that can be translated to other EDs, thereby increasing the adoption of ED-initiated buprenorphine into practice, narrowing the gap between OUD identification and treatment.
Related protocols: CTN-0099