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Recognizing and Treating Alcohol Problems in Primary Care

Recognizing and Treating Alcohol Problems in Primary Care. Katherine Watkins, M.D. Harold Alan Pincus, M.D. Terri Tanielian, M.A. Alcohol Use Disorders Are a Significant Public Health Concern. Such disorders are common 14 million people are addicted to alcohol or abuse it

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Recognizing and Treating Alcohol Problems in Primary Care

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  1. Recognizing and Treating Alcohol Problems in Primary Care Katherine Watkins, M.D. Harold Alan Pincus, M.D. Terri Tanielian, M.A.

  2. Alcohol Use Disorders Are a SignificantPublic Health Concern • Such disorders are common • 14 million people are addicted to alcohol or abuse it • 33 million engage in binge-drinking at least once a month • They have serious health-related and social consequences • They increase morbidity and mortality • Alcohol-related lost productivity, vehicle crashes, and health care come to $150 billion annually

  3. Alcohol Use Disorders Can Be Treatedbut Often Are Not • There are effective treatments for the entire spectrum of alcohol-related problems • Most individuals needing treatment do not receive it • Primary care represents a missed opportunity • 70 percent of the population visits such a provider at least once every two years • One in five men and one in ten women visiting their PCP have alcohol problems • Fewer than 1 percent receive counseling

  4. Why Are Alcohol Problems Not Widely Treated? • Alcohol disorders are rarely the main reason for a visit to a primary-care provider • Provider focuses on acute problem at hand, not bigger chronic-condition picture • Chronic conditions of any kind are generally not well treated

  5. Outline • A model has been proposed for improving chronic care • We applied this model to alcohol use disorders

  6. Outline • A model has been proposed for improving chronic care • We applied this model to alcohol use disorders

  7. Usual Chronic Illness Care • 15-minute visit, poorly organized • Discussion and exam focus on symptoms and lab results, not preventive assessment • Patient’s attempts to discuss difficulties in living with the condition are discouraged • Focus is on physician’s treatment, not patient’s role in management • Treatment plan is limited to prescription refill and encouragement to make an appointment if not feeling well • Visit ends with physician rifling through drawers, looking for a pamphlet

  8. What the New Model Hopes to Achieve Informed, Activated Patient Prepared Treatment Team Productive Interactions Better Functional and Clinical Outcomes

  9. Why the New Model Is Important • Applies to the majority of illnesses • Would revolutionize the way the health system thinks about care • Is synthesized from demonstration projects and other evidence in the literature • Has been heartily embraced by many in the field

  10. The New Chronic Care Model Guidelines Evidence-Based, Planned Care Practice/deliverysystem redesign Clinicalinformation systems Collaborativemanagement Decision supportfor providers

  11. The New Chronic Care Model Guidelines Evidence-Based, Planned Care Staffing: Who does what to whom? • Allocation of tasks • Roles • Appointments and follow-up • Incentives Practice/deliverysystem redesign Clinicalinformation systems Collaborativemanagement Decision supportfor providers

  12. The New Chronic Care Model Guidelines Evidence-Based, Planned Care Provider and patient • Identification of problems and treatment strategies • Self-management training and support activities • Patient role in follow-up Practice/deliverysystem redesign Clinicalinformation systems Collaborativemanagement Decision supportfor providers

  13. The New Chronic Care Model Guidelines Evidence-Based, Planned Care To optimally care for specific patients, PCP must have access to • Provider education • Decision support • Feedback • Consultation • Link to specialty care Practice/deliverysystem redesign Clinicalinformation systems Collaborativemanagement Decision supportfor providers

  14. The New Chronic Care Model Guidelines Evidence-Based, Planned Care Practices must develop a registry of all patients to track and monitor health • Key clinical data • Reminders • Outcomes Practice/deliverysystem redesign Clinicalinformation systems Collaborativemanagement Decision supportfor providers

  15. Outline • A model has been proposed for improving chronic care • We applied this model to alcohol use disorders

  16. Why Is This Task Important Now? • We have a chance to put care for alcohol use disorders into the mainstream of medical care • We must catch this new wave of chronic care improvement as it goes by

  17. Alcohol Use Disorders Are Like Other Chronic Conditions • A spectrum of severity must be accommodated • Condition is not obviously symptomatic at first • Course is unpredictable • Etiologies are complex • Include genetic component (for dependence) • Treatments are behaviorally oriented • There are significant problems in compliance, dropout, and relapse

  18. Adapting the Chronic Care Model Guidelines Evidence-Based, Planned Care Practice/deliverysystem redesign Clinicalinformation systems Collaborativemanagement Decision supportfor providers

  19. Adapting the Chronic Care Model Guidelines • Screening • Assessmentand diagnosis • Treatment • Long-termmanagementsupport Evidence-Based, Planned Care Practice/deliverysystem redesign Clinicalinformation systems Collaborativemanagement Decision supportfor providers

  20. Adapting Chronic Care Components Guidelines Evidence-Based, Planned Care • How are patients screening positive tracked? • Who is responsible for assessing and discussing options with patients? • Who determines whether patients receive an intervention or a referral to specialty care? • Are there referral linkages to alcohol treatment? Practice/deliverysystem redesign Clinicalinformation systems Collaborativemanagement Decision supportfor providers

  21. Adapting Chronic Care Components Guidelines • Can patients choose how to completethe screening instrument? • Are patients encouraged to take charge of their conditions and given a chance to ask questions? • What self-management support programs are available to patients? • What links are established with support groups? Evidence-Based, Planned Care Screening Assessment and diagnosis Treatment Long-term management support Practice/deliverysystem redesign Clinicalinformation systems Collaborativemanagement Decision supportfor providers

  22. Adapting Chronic Care Components Guidelines • Is the screening instrument reliable and valid for the population? • How do PCPs obtain help from specialists when diagnoses are complicated? • Do the treatment guidelines cover simultaneous conditions? • How do additional providers gain access to the shared care plan? Evidence-Based, Planned Care Screening Assessment and diagnosis Treatment Long-term management support Practice/deliverysystem redesign Clinicalinformation systems Collaborativemanagement Decision supportfor providers

  23. Adapting Chronic Care Components Guidelines • Does the information system prompt for repeated screening? • Can the system track subgroups of patients based on severity? • Does it remind providers of when patients require follow-up? • How is confidentiality protected when information is shared between providers? Evidence-Based, Planned Care Practice/deliverysystem redesign Clinicalinformation systems Collaborativemanagement Decision supportfor providers

  24. Identifying Next Steps • Prepare for feasibility study • Develop patient activation tools • Outline concrete research plan to pilot test model in 1 to 3 sites • Consider integrating model with care for other chronic conditions • Identify barriers to implementation and devise strategies to lower them • Be cognizant of cost and efficiency issues

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