PRACTITIONERS, AND PHYSICIAN ASSISTANTS

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
TUTORIAL MODULE 3 ASBIRT Alabama Screening, Brief Intervention, Referral, and Treatment Program.
Advertisements

March 18, 2014 Joan B. Kernan. SBIRT Curriculum Available Online  National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) & Drexel University College of Medicine: annotated.
Community Medic Initiative. Community Medic Fulfilling our mission statement: DGEMS provides for the health and well-being of our communities with a team.
Demand Reduction in the 2010 Drug Control Strategy: Prevention, Intervention, Treatment & Recovery A.Thomas McLellan Chief Scientist & Deputy Director.
1 1 Opportunities for Integrating Substance Use Disorder Treatment into Care Coordination Processes Darren Urada, Ph.D. UCLA Integrated Substance Abuse.
SBIRT Screening, Brief Intervention and Referral to Treatment.
FETAL ALCOHOL SPECTRUM DISORDER INITIATIVES IN IOWA Presented by Stephanie Trusty RN, BSN Nurse Clinician.
Single State Agency responsible for planning, coordination and regulation of the statewide network of prevention, intervention, treatment and recovery.
Implications for Training in Adolescent SBIRT: Knowledge, Attitudes, and Perceptions of School-Based Health Center Providers Brett Harris, DrPH Benjamin.
SBIRT: Screening, Brief Intervention, Referral to Treatment
SBIRT Angela McClellan, OCPS I Director
SBIRT and Women’s Health LYNN CAMPANARIO NOVEMBER, 2014.
Illinois Children’s Healthcare Foundation CHILDREN’S MENTAL HEALTH INITIATIVE Building Systems of Care: Community by Community Fostering Creativity Through.
M Purpose Improvement Tools/Methods Limitations / Lessons Learned Results Process Improvement Improving Hospital-Acquired Pressure Ulcers at Discharge.
Comprehensive Efforts to Address College Student Alcohol and Other Drug Misuse and Abuse Connie Boehm Director, Student Life Student Wellness.
Wisconsin Department of Health Services SBIRT Ad Hoc Committee Report Presentation to the State Council on Alcohol and Other Drug Abuse June 7, 2013.
Introduction to Healthcare and Public Health in the US Delivering Healthcare (Part 2) Lecture a This material (Comp1_Unit3a) was developed by Oregon Health.
Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services Joe Vesowate Assistant Commissioner.
Medicaid and Behavioral Health – New Directions John O’Brien Senior Policy Advisor Disabled and Elderly Health Programs Group Center for Medicaid and CHIP.
Healthcare Reform The “Affordable Care Act” How Will It Affect Substance Abuse Care?
KENTUCKY YOUTH FIRST Grant Period August July
Addiction Treatment in Healthcare Reform Tom McLellan, Jan 21, 2010.
National MEDICAL HOME Autism Initiative Poster Presentation for DEC Conference 2005 Linda Tuchman Ginsberg, PhD
ABAM/CNHF Project FELLOWSHIPS FELLOWS TRAINING EVENTS.
Primary Care and Behavioral Health (MH/SA) Integration Presented by: Kathleen Reynolds LMSW, ACSW
Results Collaboration With Trauma Centers and Emergency Rooms: Most health plans (77%) report working collaboratively with emergency rooms (ERs) and/or.
An integrated approach to addressing opiate abuse in Maine Debra L. Brucker, MPA, PhD State of Maine Office of Substance Abuse October 2009.
Accelerating Reform Initiative Developing Integrated care: Fayette Companies and Heartland Community Health Center Mike Bolye.
SCREENING BRIEF INTERVENTION AND REFERRAL TO TREATMENT (SBIRT) 1.
SCHOOL OF NURSING UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, SAN FRANCISCO Not Ready for Prime Time? A Web-Based SBIRT Intervention in an Urban Safety-Net HIV Clinic Carol.
The Real-World State of Primary Care Integration: Findings in Arizona Colleen Clemency Cordes, Ph.D. Clinical Associate Professor Ronald R. O’Donnell,
SBIRT – a tool A Preventive Approach to Address Youth Substance Use Presented by Dawn A. Randolph, MPA Public Policy Consultant, Georgia Council on Substance.
Integrating Substance Use Treatment into Primary Care: You can do it! Aaron Fox, MD, MS, Assistant Professor of Medicine Albert Einstein College of Medicine/Montefiore.
Integrating Health Care in Appalachian Ohio Family Healthcare Inc. (FHI) A federally qualified health center with the mission to provide access to affordable,
Summary Report and Recommendations on Prescription Drugs: Misuse, Abuse and Dependency Presentation for the County Alcohol and Drug Program Administrators’
J. Aaron Johnson, PhD 1 and J. Paul Seale, MD 2 1 Institute of Public and Preventive Health and Department of Psychology, Georgia Regents University, Augusta,
1 Center Mission Statements SAMHSA ? CSAT Improving the Health of the Nation by Bringing Effective Alcohol and Drug Treatment to Every Community CMHS Caring.
Equipping Residents to Address Alcohol and Drug Abuse: The National SBIRT Residency Training Project Journal of Graduate Medical Education, Vol. 4 No.
Evidence-based practice guidelines: Chronic harms of substance use.
Use of Mentored Residency Teams to Enhance Addiction Medicine Education Maureen Strohm, MD, Ken Saffier, MD, Julie Nyquist, PhD, Steve Eickelberg, MD MERF.
Results Alcohol Use Disorder Disease Management Program: Approximately three-quarters of plans (74%) reported having an alcohol disease management program.
Alcohol Screening and Brief Intervention in the Workplace: Opportunities for Early Identification and Intervention Tracy McPherson, PhD 1 ; Kathy Lusby-Treber.
Medication Assisted Treatment
OASAS Vision of Treatment System Change & How to Support It
Kathleen Brady, MD; Coleman Terrell; Marlene Matosky, MPH, RN
Family History Information Helps Inform Chronic Pain Treatment
Roger Zoorob, MD, FAAFP Sandra J. Gonzalez, MSSW, LCSW
National Health Reform is Essential
Screening and Brief Intervention (SBI) for Alcohol Problems:
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration
Public Substance Use Disorder Treatment for Youth in California County Behavioral Health Directors Association of California – All Members Meeting October.
Implementing S•BI•RT for Youth and Young Adults in Primary Care
Department of Psychiatry Section of Population Behavioral Health
Tim McAfee, M.D., M.P.H. Director, CDC Office on Smoking and Health
Rhode Island State Innovation Model (SIM) Test Grant
Screening, Brief Intervention and Referral to Treatment
What is InSight? $17 million five-year SAMHSA grant
Chart 5.10: RN Employment by Type of Provider, 2015
EDC ©2016. All rights reserved.
Overview of the Addiction Technology Transfer Center Network
Primary Prevention in the Time of the Opioid Epidemic
Bureau for Medical Services (BMS)
Statewide Health Home Initiatives
WHO WHAT WHE WHERE WHEN HOW WHY The PA SBIRT Vision:
West Virginia Medicaid Summit
Adoption Barriers.
Embedding SBIRT (Screening, Brief Intervention and Referral to Treatment) into Health Professional Trainees’ Curriculum Hartman, Cheri W. 1; Hartman, David.
National Cancer Center
Identifying and Addressing Unhealthy Substance Use
Transforming the Delivery of Substance Use Disorder Treatment in States Update August 2019.
Presentation transcript:

PRACTITIONERS, AND PHYSICIAN ASSISTANTS KNOWLEGE, TRAINING, AND SBIRT PRACTICE AMONG NEW YORK STATE PHYSICIANS, NURSE PRACTITIONERS, AND PHYSICIAN ASSISTANTS J. Yu1, PhD; B.R. Harris2, DrPH; S. DeStafeno2, MA; M. O’Grady3, PhD Background Results Screening Tools Used Most did not report using a tool that reliably identifies risky substance use (Chart 3): 78% reported asking patients directly about their use without using a screening tool 66% reported using the CAGE which identifies substance dependence, not risky use. Past research has indicated the cost-effectiveness of Screening, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Treatment (SBIRT) as an early intervention strategy in various healthcare and public health settings, including the primary care settings, to address risky use and substance use disorders. The Office of National Drug Control Policy has included SBIRT in its current drug control strategy New York State is promoting the statewide expansion and sustainability of SBIRT. This study examines the extent to which SBIRT is currently being integrated in primary care in New York State. Survey Responses The survey received 258 responses (Chart 1) Training of SBIRT Less than half of respondents had received training in how to (Chart 2): screen patients for substance use advise patients about risky substance use provide referrals to specialty treatment Gap in Knowledge Only 28% reported being somewhat or very familiar with the SBIRT model Most respondents did not use a screening tool required for Medicaid reimbursement Fifty-nine percent of respondents reported rarely or never billing for SBIRT. Conclusions Findings suggest need for increasing awareness of: The SBIRT model Federal and state recommendations for conducting SBIRT Requirements for billing and reimbursement by insurance plans for screening and intervention Results also have implications for other states that are making efforts to integrate SBIRT in primary care. Further research is required to study factors associated with levels of practice identified in this survey. Methods Between October and November 2013, an electronic survey was emailed to members of: The Medical Society of the State of New York (MSSNY) The Nurse Practitioner Association of New York (NPANY) New York State Society of Physician Assistants (NYSSPA) The survey focused on SBIRT knowledge, training, and practice among primary care professionals to obtain a better understanding of the future needs in the development of a statewide strategic plan for integration of SBIRT in the primary care setting. Practice of SBIRT 56% reported screening for substance use 45% reported conducting brief interventions, 47% reported providing referrals to specialty treatment Author Affiliations School of Social Welfare, University at Albany, State University of New York New York State Office of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse Services National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University