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Clinical Trial Summary

This project seeks to examine a critical barrier to optimizing the health care workforce for the treatment of opioid use disorders. Without a dramatic increase in the number of primary care providers trained and comfortable with the many nuances of prescribing medication-assisted treatment (MAT), the staggering increases in opioid overdose deaths will continue to skyrocket. However, Drug Addiction Treatment Act (DATA) 2000 waiver training alone is not enough to facilitate prescribing for patients who desperately need services; an estimated 40% of physicians with waivers do not initiate MAT prescriptions. To address this problem, North Carolina developed a learning collaborative framework to promote MAT training. Learning collaboratives have been shown to be an efficacious approach to increase utilization of MAT, but engagement among providers in North Carolina has been low. To date, the need to encourage provider collaborative participation at scale has not been addressed. This is the critical problem focused on in this proposal. The death rate from accidental opioid overdoses continues to climb at an alarming rate, with overdose deaths in 2016 almost five times the number from 1999. The daily death rate from opioid overdoses in the U.S. alone is now estimated at 115, so every day that evidence-based treatment is not available leads to more preventable deaths. North Carolina is one of the states with both an opioid overdose death rate greater than the national average (11.9 vs 10.4 deaths per 100,000, age-adjusted) and a rate of increase in opioid overdose deaths greater than the national average (19% vs. 16%). North Carolina is also one of four states with an Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) funded Extension for Community Healthcare Outcomes (ECHO) MAT learning collaborative available to primary care practices, but engagement among providers is low. While the main barriers to engagement are incompletely understood, recent evidence from provider interviews conducted by the study team in December 2017 and January 2018 suggest that one substantial barrier is the time required for weekly ECHO clinics.


Clinical Trial Description

This study is designed to assess how to effectively recruit and enroll primary care providers into participation into an ECHO MAT learning collaborative. For study participants that enroll in the learning collaborative, the study team will track participation over 6 months. The study is designed to be implemented in two phases. Phase 1 is the recruitment phase. Providers will be randomized to receive recruitment letters and emails from 1 of 4 conditions. Randomization for this phase will occur at the practice level, as determined by provider address. Participants that contact the study team and enroll in the study will begin Phase 2 of the study. In Phase 2 of the study participants will be randomly assigned to rewards for participation in ECHO MAT learning collaborative. Their participation in the learning collaborative will be tracked. Phase 2 of the study is a pilot. Recruitment: Primary care providers will receive recruitment letters, and may receive emails and phone calls based on the recruitment condition they are assigned to. Informed Consent: Since it is not possible to consent before recruitment, participants will complete the informed consent process at the beginning of Phase 2 of the study. The consent form will be shared with eligible participants when they contact the study team to enroll. Before enrolling in the ECHO MAT learning collaborative, participants will be asked to provide consent in order to enroll in the study. Randomization: Phase 1: Primary care providers will be randomized by practice to 1 of 4 study arms. Computerized randomization will assign practices to study arms, practices and primary care providers will have an equal chance of being randomized to each study arm . Phase 2: Eligible participants will be randomized to the Phase 2 study arm upon enrollment in the study. Randomization will be assigned using a predetermined randomly ordered list of study condition assignments. Upon enrolling in the study, the participants will be assigned to the condition that is next on the list. Participants will have an equal chance of being randomized to each study arm. Assessment: Assessment for Phase 1 will occur when participants contact study staff with interest in the study or to enroll. Any primary care providers that are sent letters but do not contact study staff will be included in study analyses as 'No' for outcomes for Phase 1. Assessment for Phase 2 will occur throughout the 6 months after participants enroll in the study. Outcomes for this study phase are related to participation in ECHO MAT learning collaboratives, which is tracked for each training by study staff. Detailed Description of the Intervention: Phase 1 recruitment letters are designed in a 2 (prosocial mention of need for primary care providers trained in opioid use disorder treatment vs. none) x 2 (mention of additional practice supports available for participation in training vs. none). This yields 4 study conditions for recruitment letters: 1) Letter including prosocial messages and additional mention of practice supports available for participation, 2) Letter including prosocial messages but no additional mention of practice support available for participation, 3) Letter including an additional mention of practice support available for participation but no prosocial messages, and 4) Recruitment as usual letter that does not include prosocial messages or an additional mention of practice support available for participation. Phase 2 examines participation in the learning community by group. Participants will be randomly assigned to 1 of 3 groups. At this time the investigators are not disclosing the Phase 2 conditions, and will disclose these at the end of the study, as approved by UNC's institutional review board (IRB). ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03834025
Study type Interventional
Source University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date February 12, 2019
Completion date August 28, 2020