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A Taxonomy of Hospital-Based Addiction Care Models: a Scoping Review and Key Informant Interviews

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JOURNAL OF GENERAL INTERNAL MEDICINE
卷 37, 期 11, 页码 2821-2833

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SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11606-022-07618-x

关键词

addiction consult service; psychiatry consult liaison service; hospital-based opioid treatment; substance withdrawal syndrome; substance-related disorders; hospitalized patient; referral and consultation

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This study constructed a taxonomy of hospital-based addiction care models through literature review and key informant interviews, providing a framework for hospital clinicians, researchers, and policymakers to describe, compare, and select models for implementing addiction care in hospitals.
Background There is pressing need to improve hospital-based addiction care. Various models for integrating substance use disorder care into hospital settings exist, but there is no framework for describing, selecting, or comparing models. We sought to fill that gap by constructing a taxonomy of hospital-based addiction care models based on scoping literature review and key informant interviews. Methods Methods included a scoping review of the literature on US hospital-based addiction care models and interventions for adults, published between January 2000 and July 2021. We conducted semi-structured interviews with 15 key informants experienced in leading, implementing, evaluating, andpracticing hospital-based addiction care to explore model characteristics, including their perceived strengths, limitations, and implementation considerations. We synthesized findings from the literature review and interviews to construct a taxonomy of model types. Results Searches identified 2,849 unique abstracts. Of these, we reviewed 280 full text articles, of which 76 were included in the final review. We added 8 references from reference lists and informant interviews, and 4 gray literature sources. We identified six distinct hospital-based addiction care models. Those classified as addiction consult models include (1) interprofessional addiction consult services, (2) psychiatry consult liaison services, and (3) individual consultant models. Those classified as practice-based models, wherein general hospital staff integrate addiction care into usual practice, include (4) hospital-based opioid treatment and (5) hospital-based alcohol treatment. The final type was (6) community-based in-reach, wherein community providers deliver care. Models vary in their target patient population, staffing, and core clinical and systems change activities. Limitations include that some models have overlapping characteristics and variable ways of delivering core components. Discussion A taxonomy provides hospital clinicians and administrators, researchers, and policy-makers with a framework to describe, compare, and select models for implementing hospital-based addiction care and measure outcomes.

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