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Screening and Management of Unhealthy Alcohol Use in Primary Care

Practice Facilitation to Promote Evidence-based Screening and Management of Unhealthy Alcohol Use in Primary Care

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT04248023
Enrollment
13680
Registered
2020-01-30
Start date
2020-07-15
Completion date
2023-05-31
Last updated
2023-07-25

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Alcohol Drinking, Alcohol Abuse, Alcohol Use Disorder

Keywords

Alcohol Misuse, Alcohol Abuse, Practice Facilitation, Motivational Interviewing, Preventive Services

Brief summary

Unhealthy alcohol use is the third leading preventable cause of death in the United States. Yet, primary care physicians do not, on average, screen for and address unhealthy alcohol use in their patient populations. By implementing practice changes to promote screening and treatment, patients stand to reduce unhealthy alcohol use and benefit from improved health outcomes. This project will provide a sample of Virginia primary care practices with a practice facilitator, practice specific resources, education on screening and counseling, and education on medication assisted therapy. The project will measure whether this change will improve screening rates and promote reduction of unhealthy alcohol use.

Detailed description

Unhealthy alcohol use is the third leading cause of preventable death in the US. Evidence shows that screening for unhealthy alcohol use and providing persons engaged in risky drinking with brief behavioral counseling interventions improves health outcomes, collectively termed screening and brief intervention (SBI). For moderate or severe alcohol use disorder (AUD), medication assistance therapy (MAT) is effective. Despite clear evidence of effectiveness, only 13% of primary care patients are screened with a standard instrument and only 6.7% of adults with AUD receive treatment. We believe that underutilization of SBI and MAT are driven by both a misunderstanding of the role and effectiveness of primary care in addressing unhealthy alcohol and limited practice resource and infrastructure. To promote the dissemination and implementation of evidence-based strategies to address unhealthy alcohol use throughout Virginia, we have extended our EvidenceNow collaboration to include addiction medicine experts at Virginia Commonwealth University, the Virginia Ambulatory Care Outcomes Research Network (ACORN), our state's family medicine residency training programs, and our state's Community Service Boards. We propose a practice-level cluster randomized trial with wait list control. 125 primary care practices in five regions throughout the state, each centered around a residency site for educational support, will receive a practice facilitation intervention to implement screening, counseling, and treatment for unhealthy alcohol at intervention start or 6-month delay. Guided by the identified EvidenceNow key drivers for change, practice support will include practice facilitation, education and training, shared learning and best practices, screening and counseling toolkits, data support, and assessment with feedback. Each practice will identify a clinician, nurse, and administrator champion to locally lead efforts and participate in learning collaboratives. Practices will design and implement screening, counseling, and treatment processes and operational changes, adapting their implementation strategy based on experiences and findings from other sites. We will conduct a mixed methods analysis. Primary outcomes will include the increase in screening for unhealthy alcohol use, increase in provision of brief counseling interventions and MAT, and reduction in alcohol intake for patients after practices receive practice facilitation. We will use the consolidated framework for implementation research to code and rate practice facilitation (e.g. dose, mode, reach) and practice implementation strategies (e.g. SBI and MAT strategies and tools implemented) on outcomes. Data sources will include practice facilitator field notes and interviews, chart reviews, patient survey, clinician survey, All Payer Claims Data, and qualitative interviews. We will administer the patient survey at baseline, 3 months, and 6 months after the intervention. Among patients age 18 to 75 with an office visit the prior month, we will randomly select 60 to survey. In addition to our internal evaluation, we will participate in the external collaborative evaluation and dissemination activities with AHRQ throughout the project.

Interventions

A practice facilitator will be assigned the each participating practice to assist with the development of a workflow, screening process, counseling resources, and referral resources for unhealthy alcohol use. Practices in control group will receive delayed intervention at 3 months after their matched cohort of practices.

Sponsors

Virginia Commonwealth University
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
SCREENING
Masking
NONE

Masking description

Based on the intervention of practice facilitation, it is not able to blind practices or clinicians from the intervention.

Intervention model description

This study is a practice level randomized controlled trial. 125 practices across Virginia will receive the intervention (practice facilitation to enhance screening and treatment of unhealthy alcohol use (UAU)) or act as a control group (will receive practice facilitation at 3 month lag behind intervention groups.) The investigators will survey 60 patients from each practice at three time intervals to evaluate the current state and what changes are implemented and reported over the course of the study. An additional 60 patient chart review from each practice will be preformed. The investigators will use an implementation-effectiveness design to measure outcomes. Effectiveness outcomes include increased screening rate of patients; increased treatment of any kind for patients with UAU; and reduction of UAU. Implementation outcomes will include the barriers and facilitators to screening and evaluating for UAU.

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

Practice Inclusion Criteria: 1. Primary care practices 2. Ambulatory care practices Patient Inclusion Criteria: 1\. Patients 18 years and older and with an office visit at an included study site Practice

Exclusion criteria

1. Practices that do not provide outpatient care 2. Practices that do not provide primary care Patient

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Screening for Unhealthy Alcohol Use6 monthsThis outcome will evaluate the percent of patients who were screened in clinic or report screening for alcohol use (numerator = intervention patients sampled who received counseling/ denominator = intervention patients who did not receive counseling at 3 time points.)
Treatment for Unhealthy Alcohol Use6 monthsThis outcome will measure the percent of patients, screening positive for risky alcohol use, that receive any type of treatment including, but not limited to, counseling, brief intervention, motivational interviewing, referral, or medication assisted treatment.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Reduction of Unhealthy Alcohol Use6 monthsThis measure will identify the percent of patients with unhealthy alcohol use that have reduced alcohol intake after practice facilitation (numerator = number of sample patients with unhealthy alcohol use at baseline that received treatment / denominator = number of patients with unhealthy alcohol use at baseline.)

Countries

United States

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 18, 2026