Northwestern Events Calendar

Apr
23
2024

PSMG Virtual Grand Rounds | Jennifer McNeely, MD | Partnering with a large health system to study the effectiveness of an innovative clinical program to improve care for hospital patients with substance use disorders

When: Tuesday, April 23, 2024
12:00 PM - 1:30 PM CT

Where: Online

Audience: Faculty/Staff - Student - Post Docs/Docs - Graduate Students

Contact: Emma Little  

Group: Center for Dissemination and Implementation Science (CDIS)

Category: Grand Rounds, Lectures & Meetings

Description:

Center for Prevention Implementation Methodology (Ce-PIM)

Prevention Science & Methodology Group (PSMG) Virtual Grand Rounds

Tuesday, April 23, 2024

12:00 PM – 1:30 PM CT

Jennifer McNeely, MD
NYU Grossman School of Medicine

Individuals with substance use disorders (SUD) have high rates of hospitalization, and frequently have poor health outcomes and low rates of addiction treatment.  Hospital-based addiction consult services have the potential to improve inpatient and post-discharge care for patients with substance use disorders (SUD), and can be an important component of strategies to reduce opioid-related overdose.  Beginning in 2017, with special funds from the NYC Mayor’s Office to address the opioid crisis, the New York City Health + Hospitals (H+H) system began the Consult for Addiction Treatment and Care in Hospitals (CATCH) program in 6 hospitals.  We partnered with H+H to design the program model and conduct a NIDA-funded pragmatic trial of the CATCH program focused on patients with opioid use disorder (OUD).  A hybrid effectiveness-implementation study (Type 1) studied the effectiveness of CATCH for increasing post-discharge initiation and engagement in OUD treatment, while studying the process of implementing this large new program in public hospital settings to inform its adoption and sustainability.  A stepped-wedge cluster randomized trial design compared treatment outcomes for patients hospitalized during the CATCH versus treatment as usual periods.  A mixed methods approach primarily utilized Medicaid claims data to measure outcomes, while electronic health records data and interviews with staff and patients provided additional information on implementation fidelity and barriers.  Our study involved active ongoing collaboration with the H+H system, including through the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic, which presented unprecedented challenges to the City’s public hospitals.  This talk will reflect on the process of partnering with a large health system to study a new program, present findings on the program’s effectiveness, and discuss the implementation process and outcomes. 

Please join our PSMG listserv to attend live at https://cepim.northwestern.edu/psmg-membership or you may view any of our past presentations on our archive which are open to all https://cepim.northwestern.edu/psmg-archive

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