Increasing access to quality care for pregnant and postpartum people with opioid use disorder: Coordination of services, provider awareness and training, extended postpartum coverage, and perinatal quality collaboratives

Kecia L. Ellick,Charlan D. Kroelinger,Karen Chang, Molly Mcgown, Matthew Mcreynolds,Alisa J. Velonis, Emily Bronson, Tiffany Riehle-Colarusso, Ellen Pliska, Sanaa Akbarali, Trish Mueller, Ramya Dronamraju,Shanna Cox,Wanda D. Barfield

JOURNAL OF SUBSTANCE USE & ADDICTION TREATMENT(2024)

引用 0|浏览2
暂无评分
摘要
Introduction: Fifteen states participating in the Opioid Use Disorder, Maternal Outcomes, and Neonatal Absti-nence Syndrome Initiative Learning Community (OMNI LC) developed action plan goals and activities to address the rise in opioid use disorder (OUD) among birthing persons. In a separate initiative, Perinatal Quality Col-laboratives (PQCs) from 12 states participating in Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)-supported activities hosted trainings to improve the provision of OUD services and implement protocols for screening and treatment in delivery facilities. Methods: This descriptive study synthesizes qualitative data extracted from 15 OMNI LC state action plans, ex-cerpts from qualitative interviews conducted with OMNI LC state teams, and quantitative data from quarterly project performance monitoring reports from 12 CDC-funded PQCs implementing quality improvement activities to address clinical service gaps for pregnant and postpartum people with OUD. Qualitative data were deiden-tified, coded as barriers or facilitators, then aggregated into emergent themes. Count data are presented for quantitative results. Results: The OMNI LC states identified a lack of coordinated care among providers, stigma toward people with OUD, discontinued insurance coverage, and inconsistencies in screening and treating birthing people with OUD as barriers to accessing quality care. State-identified facilitators for access to quality care included: 1) improving engagement and communication between providers and other partners to integrate medical and behavioral health services post-discharge, and facilitate improved patient care postpartum; 2) training providers to prescribe medications for OUD, and to address bias and reduce patient stigma; 3) extending Medicaid coverage up to one year postpartum to increase access to and continuity of services; and 4) implementing screening, brief inter-vention, and referral to treatment (SBIRT) in clinical practice. PQCs demonstrated that increased provider trainings to treat OUD, improvements in implementation of standardized protocols, and use of evidence-based tools can facilitate access to and coordination of services in delivery facilities. Conclusion: State-identified facilitators for increasing access to care include coordinating integrated services, extending postpartum coverage, and provider trainings to improve screening and treatment. PQCs provide a platform for identifying emerging areas for quality improvement initiatives and implementing clinical best practices to provide comprehensive, quality perinatal care for birthing populations.
更多
查看译文
关键词
Opioid use disorder,Pregnant and postpartum,Perinatal quality collaboratives,Access to care
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要