Sarah K Casey, Sydney Howard, Susan Regan, Alison Romero, Elizabeth A Powell, Laura Kehoe, Martha T Kane, Sarah E Wakeman
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The primary outcome was being in care anywhere at time of follow-up. We also examined the proportion of patients who completed each step of the cascade of care following transfer: connection to transfer clinic, completion of a clinic visit, retention in care, and medication use among those remaining in care at the transfer clinic. We examined the association of different bridge clinic services with still being in care anywhere and the association between successful transfer with being in care and taking medication at follow-up.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>Of 209 eligible participants, 63 were surveyed. Sixty-five percent of participants identified as male, 74% as white, 12% as Hispanic, 6% as Black, and 16% were unhoused. Most participants (78%) reported being connected to SUD treatment from the Bridge Clinic, and 37% remained in care at the same facility at the time of survey. Eighty-four percent reported being in treatment anywhere and 68% reported taking medication for SUD at follow-up, with most participants reporting taking buprenorphine (46%).</p><p><strong>Conclusion: </strong>Of those participants who transitioned out of a bridge clinic into community-based SUD care, 78% were successfully connected to ongoing care and 84% were still in care at follow-up.</p>","PeriodicalId":516535,"journal":{"name":"Substance use & addiction journal","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-06-24","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Linkage to Care Outcomes Following Treatment in A Low-Threshold Substance Use Disorder Bridge Clinic.\",\"authors\":\"Sarah K Casey, Sydney Howard, Susan Regan, Alison Romero, Elizabeth A Powell, Laura Kehoe, Martha T Kane, Sarah E Wakeman\",\"doi\":\"10.1177/29767342241261609\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><strong>Background: </strong>Treatment for substance use disorders (SUD) remains low in the United States. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
背景:在美国,药物使用障碍(SUD)的治疗率仍然很低。为了更好地满足酒精和其他药物使用者的需求,提供无障碍治疗和减低伤害服务的低门槛桥式诊所越来越盛行。桥式诊所通过为 SUD 患者提供当天的药物和治疗,并最终将患者过渡到社区治疗提供者,努力克服治疗障碍。在本研究中,我们对从过渡诊所转出的 SUD 患者的治疗结果进行了研究:这是一项回顾性队列研究,研究对象是 2017 年至 2022 年期间在一家城市医疗中心的桥梁诊所就诊的患者的治疗后结果。主要结果是随访时在任何地方接受治疗。我们还考察了转院后完成级联治疗各步骤的患者比例:转院诊所的连接、完成诊所就诊、继续接受治疗以及转院诊所继续接受治疗者的药物使用情况。我们研究了不同桥梁诊所服务与在任何地方仍在接受护理之间的关系,以及成功转院与接受护理和随访时服药之间的关系:在 209 名符合条件的参与者中,有 63 人接受了调查。65%的参与者为男性,74%为白人,12%为西班牙裔,6%为黑人,16%无住房。大多数参与者(78%)称,他们从桥诊所接受了药物滥用治疗,37%的参与者在接受调查时仍在同一机构接受治疗。84%的参与者表示在任何地方都接受过治疗,68%的参与者表示在随访时服用了治疗药物,其中大多数人表示服用了丁丙诺啡(46%):结论:在从桥梁诊所过渡到社区药物滥用治疗的参与者中,78% 的人成功获得了持续治疗,84% 的人在随访时仍在接受治疗。
Linkage to Care Outcomes Following Treatment in A Low-Threshold Substance Use Disorder Bridge Clinic.
Background: Treatment for substance use disorders (SUD) remains low in the United States. To better meet needs of people who use alcohol and other drugs, low threshold bridge clinics which offer treatment without barrier and harm reduction services have gained prevalence. Bridge clinics work to surmount barriers to care by providing same day medication and treatment for SUD and eventually transitioning patients to community-based treatment providers. In this study, we examine SUD treatment outcomes among patients who transitioned out of a bridge clinic.
Methods: This is a retrospective cohort study of posttreatment outcomes of patients seen at an urban medical center's bridge clinic between 2017 and 2022. The primary outcome was being in care anywhere at time of follow-up. We also examined the proportion of patients who completed each step of the cascade of care following transfer: connection to transfer clinic, completion of a clinic visit, retention in care, and medication use among those remaining in care at the transfer clinic. We examined the association of different bridge clinic services with still being in care anywhere and the association between successful transfer with being in care and taking medication at follow-up.
Results: Of 209 eligible participants, 63 were surveyed. Sixty-five percent of participants identified as male, 74% as white, 12% as Hispanic, 6% as Black, and 16% were unhoused. Most participants (78%) reported being connected to SUD treatment from the Bridge Clinic, and 37% remained in care at the same facility at the time of survey. Eighty-four percent reported being in treatment anywhere and 68% reported taking medication for SUD at follow-up, with most participants reporting taking buprenorphine (46%).
Conclusion: Of those participants who transitioned out of a bridge clinic into community-based SUD care, 78% were successfully connected to ongoing care and 84% were still in care at follow-up.