grant

Integrating Addiction and Infectious Diseases Services into Primary Care in Rural Settings

Organization YALE UNIVERSITYLocation NEW HAVEN, UNITED STATESPosted 1 Aug 2021Deadline 31 May 2027
NIHUS FederalResearch GrantFY2025AIDS VirusAIDS preventionAcademyAcquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome VirusAcquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome VirusAddressAdministratorAdoptedAdoptionCaringClinicClinicalClinical SkillsCommunicable DiseasesCountyDisease OutbreaksDrugsEducationEducational aspectsElectronic Health RecordElementsEpidemicEvaluationEvidence based practiceEvidence based treatmentHCVHCV therapyHCV treatmentHCV/HIVHIVHIV InfectionsHIV PreventionHIV and HCVHIV and hepatitis CHIV-HCVHIV/AIDS preventionHIV/HCVHIV/Hepatitis CHTLV-III InfectionsHTLV-III-LAV InfectionsHealthHealth BenefitHealth CareHepatitis C TherapeuticsHepatitis C TherapyHepatitis C Virus TreatmentHepatitis C treatmentHepatitis C virusHuman Immunodeficiency VirusesHuman T-Lymphotropic Virus Type III InfectionsHybridsIndianaIndividualInfectionInfectious DiseasesInfectious DisorderInjecting drug userInjection Drug UserInternationalKnowledgeLAV-HTLV-IIILearningLinkLymphadenopathy-Associated VirusMeasuresMediatorMedicationMedicineModelingModificationNatureNeedle-Exchange ProgramsOutbreaksOutcomeOverdosePARiHS frameworkPWIDPerceptionPerformancePharmaceutical PreparationsPoliciesPolicy MakerPrEPPredispositionPreventionPrimary CareProcessPromoting Action on Research Implementation in Health Services frameworkPublic HealthRecommendationReportingReproducibilityRuralSBIRTServicesSpecialtySusceptibilitySyringe-Exchange ProgramsTestingTrainingTranslatingUkraineVirus-HIVVolatilizationWest Virginiaaddictionaddictive disorderalcohol misusebehavioral healthbrief interventionbrief therapybrief treatmentclinical promptclinician factorsclinician-level factorsdashboarddesigndesigningdigital promptdrug/agenteffective therapyeffective treatmenteffectiveness outcomeeffectiveness-related outcomesefficacy outcomeselectronic health care recordelectronic health medical recordelectronic health plan recordelectronic health registryelectronic medical health recordethanol misuseexperienceflexibilityflexibleimplementation frameworkimplementation outcomesimplementation research frameworkimplementation science frameworkimplementation trialimprovedinnovateinnovationinnovativeintegrated careintegrated health careintegrated model of caremedical specialtiesmedication for opioid use disorderneedle exchangeopiate crisisopiate use disorderopioid crisisopioid epidemicopioid use disorderpeople who inject drugspeople who inject illicit drugspersons who inject drugsphysician factorsphysician-level factorspre-exposure prophylaxispreventpreventingprimary care clinicprimary care providerprimary outcomeprovider factorsprovider-level factorsproviders from primary careproviders of primary careresponserural countiesrural localityrural placerural settingscale upscreeningscreening, brief intervention, and referralscreening, brief intervention, and referral to treatmentscreening, brief intervention, referral, and treatmentscreeningsservice deliveryservice programssuccesssyndemicsynergistic epidemicsyringe exchangesyringe exchange servicessyringe service programssyringe servicessystematic reviewtooltreatment as preventiontreatment-based preventionunhealthy alcohol use
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Full Description

Abstract
The US strategy to End the HIV Epidemic calls for expanded prevention of new infections and more effective

responses to HIV outbreaks. These outbreaks often occur in counties and states that share a disproportional

burden of HIV, but the co-occurring and syndemic nature with opioid use disorder (OUD) leaves hundreds of

additional counties and regions highly susceptible to new HIV (and HCV) outbreaks. West Virginia (WV) is one

such mostly rural setting with an explosive opioid epidemic manifest by the highest per capita rate of overdoses

and 5 counties with recent HIV outbreaks. Evidence-based practices to prevent and control HIV in clinical settings

include medications for OUD (MOUD), ART treatment as prevention (TasP) and pre-exposure prophylaxis

(PrEP). Treatment with these medications, however, first requires screening and evaluation, followed by

treatment (SET). Adoption of SET processes may in turn translate to better health outcomes if adequately

facilitated. Most rural settings are poorly equipped to provide specialty HIV/HCV/OUD services – an important

lesson from Scott County, Indiana. Yet rural settings rely mostly on primary care clinics (PCC) with inadequate

expertise to provide these services. To overcome adoption barriers of SET processes for HIV/HCV/OUD,

effective facilitation is key and the NIATx treatment improvement strategy combined with ongoing clinical

education and support provided by Project ECHO has the potential to increase adoption to integrate specialty

HIV/HCV/OUD services into PCCs. Using the i-PARiHS implementation framework, we propose to address this

unmet need by first identifying barriers to adoption and scale-up of HIV/HCV/OUD services. Then we will facilitate

practice transformation by integrating clinical prompts in the electronic health record (EHR) to screen for

HIV/HCV/OUD, followed by treatment prompts. Treatment will be supported by Project ECHO that provides

ongoing clinical support to inspire confidence in treatment, alongside a clinical dashboard embedded within the

EHR as part of the quality performance improvement activities to sustain integrating HIV/HCV/OUD services into

PCCs. We then propose to conduct a stepped wedge, Type 3, hybrid implementation trial to assess the extent

to which clinicians adopt and sustain SET processes to integrate care at 20 PCCs that is facilitated by rapid cycle

change projects using NIATx. Adoption of SET processes are the primary outcome and a composite quality

health indicator (QHI) that combines QHIs for primary care, HIV, HCV and MOUD are secondary efficacy

outcomes. Organizational and clinician factors, along with engagement in facilitation activities (NIATx, ECHO

sessions) will be explored as potential mediators and moderators. Significance is high for the rural WV context

where a volatile opioid epidemic has ignited HIV/HCV outbreaks. Innovation is high by integrating HIV/HCV/OUD

services into PCCs using a framework and strategy we successfully used in urban international settings. Public

health benefits are high given the lack of knowledge known about integrating services into rural PCCs. Feasibility

is high based on the track record of an experienced team with interdisciplinary expertise and prior in WV.

Grant Number: 5R01DA054703-04
NIH Institute/Center: NIH

Principal Investigator: FREDERICK ALTICE

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