Cargando…

742. The Development, Implementation, and Feasibility of Multidisciplinary Treatment Planning Conference for Individuals with Unstable Substance Use Disorders and Active Infections Requiring Prolonged Antimicrobial Therapy: The OPTIONS-DC Model

BACKGROUND: Outpatient parenteral antimicrobial therapy (OPAT), widely used for serious infections, has high failure rates in people with substances use disorders (SUD)(1–2). At our institution, completing therapy in the hospital was previously the best option for high-risk patients; but long hospit...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Strnad, Luke, Douglass, Alyse, Young, Kathleen, Mayer, Heather, Brown, Jessica, Mahoney, Stacey, Dellabough-Gormley, Elona, Gore, Sara J, Englander, Honora, Gregg, Jessica, Sikka, Monica
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6810966/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofz360.810
_version_ 1783462363905654784
author Strnad, Luke
Douglass, Alyse
Young, Kathleen
Mayer, Heather
Brown, Jessica
Mahoney, Stacey
Dellabough-Gormley, Elona
Gore, Sara J
Englander, Honora
Gregg, Jessica
Sikka, Monica
Sikka, Monica
author_facet Strnad, Luke
Douglass, Alyse
Young, Kathleen
Mayer, Heather
Brown, Jessica
Mahoney, Stacey
Dellabough-Gormley, Elona
Gore, Sara J
Englander, Honora
Gregg, Jessica
Sikka, Monica
Sikka, Monica
author_sort Strnad, Luke
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Outpatient parenteral antimicrobial therapy (OPAT), widely used for serious infections, has high failure rates in people with substances use disorders (SUD)(1–2). At our institution, completing therapy in the hospital was previously the best option for high-risk patients; but long hospital stays are often unacceptable to patients and costly. To improve outcomes, our Infectious Diseases division, OPAT program, and Improving Addiction Care Team (IMPACT) developed and implemented a novel multidisciplinary conference (OPTIONS-DC) for inpatients with SUD requiring prolonged antibiotics. This study describes the conference development, tool, and initial experience. METHODS: From June 2017 to June 2018, diverse stakeholders collaboratively created and implemented a structured conference to discuss treatment options that balance medical efficacy, patient preferences, and feasibility using harm-reduction principles. After 10 months of hospital-wide implementation, we elicited provider feedback and performed a content analysis of OPTIONS-DC notes and patient records to evaluate the impact. RESULTS: The goal of conference development was prioritizing patient preferences and engaging multidisciplinary input. One RN facilitates the conference using the tool (Figure 1) to elicit input from the relevant providers. The tool systematically addresses components that may predict treatment success (i.e., working phone) while emphasizing patient preference and harm reduction. The IMPACT social work PICC safety assessment informs risks for IV access. Antibiotic recommendations are not a binary of optimal/suboptimal choices for the infection but options that best fit patient context. The average conference length was 28 minutes (IQR 21). Preliminary data shows good clinical outcomes and savings to inpatient days and cost. Initial feedback suggests the model was positively experienced by medical providers (Figure 2) and supported patient preferences. CONCLUSION: A multidisciplinary patient-centered conference that prioritizes patient preference and uses harm-reduction principles for this high-risk population is practical, effective, and positively experienced by providers. This model may serve as a roadmap for other institutions. [Image: see text] [Image: see text] DISCLOSURES: All authors: No reported disclosures.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6810966
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2019
publisher Oxford University Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-68109662019-10-28 742. The Development, Implementation, and Feasibility of Multidisciplinary Treatment Planning Conference for Individuals with Unstable Substance Use Disorders and Active Infections Requiring Prolonged Antimicrobial Therapy: The OPTIONS-DC Model Strnad, Luke Douglass, Alyse Young, Kathleen Mayer, Heather Brown, Jessica Mahoney, Stacey Dellabough-Gormley, Elona Gore, Sara J Englander, Honora Gregg, Jessica Sikka, Monica Sikka, Monica Open Forum Infect Dis Abstracts BACKGROUND: Outpatient parenteral antimicrobial therapy (OPAT), widely used for serious infections, has high failure rates in people with substances use disorders (SUD)(1–2). At our institution, completing therapy in the hospital was previously the best option for high-risk patients; but long hospital stays are often unacceptable to patients and costly. To improve outcomes, our Infectious Diseases division, OPAT program, and Improving Addiction Care Team (IMPACT) developed and implemented a novel multidisciplinary conference (OPTIONS-DC) for inpatients with SUD requiring prolonged antibiotics. This study describes the conference development, tool, and initial experience. METHODS: From June 2017 to June 2018, diverse stakeholders collaboratively created and implemented a structured conference to discuss treatment options that balance medical efficacy, patient preferences, and feasibility using harm-reduction principles. After 10 months of hospital-wide implementation, we elicited provider feedback and performed a content analysis of OPTIONS-DC notes and patient records to evaluate the impact. RESULTS: The goal of conference development was prioritizing patient preferences and engaging multidisciplinary input. One RN facilitates the conference using the tool (Figure 1) to elicit input from the relevant providers. The tool systematically addresses components that may predict treatment success (i.e., working phone) while emphasizing patient preference and harm reduction. The IMPACT social work PICC safety assessment informs risks for IV access. Antibiotic recommendations are not a binary of optimal/suboptimal choices for the infection but options that best fit patient context. The average conference length was 28 minutes (IQR 21). Preliminary data shows good clinical outcomes and savings to inpatient days and cost. Initial feedback suggests the model was positively experienced by medical providers (Figure 2) and supported patient preferences. CONCLUSION: A multidisciplinary patient-centered conference that prioritizes patient preference and uses harm-reduction principles for this high-risk population is practical, effective, and positively experienced by providers. This model may serve as a roadmap for other institutions. [Image: see text] [Image: see text] DISCLOSURES: All authors: No reported disclosures. Oxford University Press 2019-10-23 /pmc/articles/PMC6810966/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofz360.810 Text en © The Author(s) 2019. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Infectious Diseases Society of America. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Abstracts
Strnad, Luke
Douglass, Alyse
Young, Kathleen
Mayer, Heather
Brown, Jessica
Mahoney, Stacey
Dellabough-Gormley, Elona
Gore, Sara J
Englander, Honora
Gregg, Jessica
Sikka, Monica
Sikka, Monica
742. The Development, Implementation, and Feasibility of Multidisciplinary Treatment Planning Conference for Individuals with Unstable Substance Use Disorders and Active Infections Requiring Prolonged Antimicrobial Therapy: The OPTIONS-DC Model
title 742. The Development, Implementation, and Feasibility of Multidisciplinary Treatment Planning Conference for Individuals with Unstable Substance Use Disorders and Active Infections Requiring Prolonged Antimicrobial Therapy: The OPTIONS-DC Model
title_full 742. The Development, Implementation, and Feasibility of Multidisciplinary Treatment Planning Conference for Individuals with Unstable Substance Use Disorders and Active Infections Requiring Prolonged Antimicrobial Therapy: The OPTIONS-DC Model
title_fullStr 742. The Development, Implementation, and Feasibility of Multidisciplinary Treatment Planning Conference for Individuals with Unstable Substance Use Disorders and Active Infections Requiring Prolonged Antimicrobial Therapy: The OPTIONS-DC Model
title_full_unstemmed 742. The Development, Implementation, and Feasibility of Multidisciplinary Treatment Planning Conference for Individuals with Unstable Substance Use Disorders and Active Infections Requiring Prolonged Antimicrobial Therapy: The OPTIONS-DC Model
title_short 742. The Development, Implementation, and Feasibility of Multidisciplinary Treatment Planning Conference for Individuals with Unstable Substance Use Disorders and Active Infections Requiring Prolonged Antimicrobial Therapy: The OPTIONS-DC Model
title_sort 742. the development, implementation, and feasibility of multidisciplinary treatment planning conference for individuals with unstable substance use disorders and active infections requiring prolonged antimicrobial therapy: the options-dc model
topic Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6810966/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofz360.810
work_keys_str_mv AT strnadluke 742thedevelopmentimplementationandfeasibilityofmultidisciplinarytreatmentplanningconferenceforindividualswithunstablesubstanceusedisordersandactiveinfectionsrequiringprolongedantimicrobialtherapytheoptionsdcmodel
AT douglassalyse 742thedevelopmentimplementationandfeasibilityofmultidisciplinarytreatmentplanningconferenceforindividualswithunstablesubstanceusedisordersandactiveinfectionsrequiringprolongedantimicrobialtherapytheoptionsdcmodel
AT youngkathleen 742thedevelopmentimplementationandfeasibilityofmultidisciplinarytreatmentplanningconferenceforindividualswithunstablesubstanceusedisordersandactiveinfectionsrequiringprolongedantimicrobialtherapytheoptionsdcmodel
AT mayerheather 742thedevelopmentimplementationandfeasibilityofmultidisciplinarytreatmentplanningconferenceforindividualswithunstablesubstanceusedisordersandactiveinfectionsrequiringprolongedantimicrobialtherapytheoptionsdcmodel
AT brownjessica 742thedevelopmentimplementationandfeasibilityofmultidisciplinarytreatmentplanningconferenceforindividualswithunstablesubstanceusedisordersandactiveinfectionsrequiringprolongedantimicrobialtherapytheoptionsdcmodel
AT mahoneystacey 742thedevelopmentimplementationandfeasibilityofmultidisciplinarytreatmentplanningconferenceforindividualswithunstablesubstanceusedisordersandactiveinfectionsrequiringprolongedantimicrobialtherapytheoptionsdcmodel
AT dellaboughgormleyelona 742thedevelopmentimplementationandfeasibilityofmultidisciplinarytreatmentplanningconferenceforindividualswithunstablesubstanceusedisordersandactiveinfectionsrequiringprolongedantimicrobialtherapytheoptionsdcmodel
AT goresaraj 742thedevelopmentimplementationandfeasibilityofmultidisciplinarytreatmentplanningconferenceforindividualswithunstablesubstanceusedisordersandactiveinfectionsrequiringprolongedantimicrobialtherapytheoptionsdcmodel
AT englanderhonora 742thedevelopmentimplementationandfeasibilityofmultidisciplinarytreatmentplanningconferenceforindividualswithunstablesubstanceusedisordersandactiveinfectionsrequiringprolongedantimicrobialtherapytheoptionsdcmodel
AT greggjessica 742thedevelopmentimplementationandfeasibilityofmultidisciplinarytreatmentplanningconferenceforindividualswithunstablesubstanceusedisordersandactiveinfectionsrequiringprolongedantimicrobialtherapytheoptionsdcmodel
AT sikkamonica 742thedevelopmentimplementationandfeasibilityofmultidisciplinarytreatmentplanningconferenceforindividualswithunstablesubstanceusedisordersandactiveinfectionsrequiringprolongedantimicrobialtherapytheoptionsdcmodel
AT sikkamonica 742thedevelopmentimplementationandfeasibilityofmultidisciplinarytreatmentplanningconferenceforindividualswithunstablesubstanceusedisordersandactiveinfectionsrequiringprolongedantimicrobialtherapytheoptionsdcmodel