Title: Relationships Between the Availability of InfectionRelated Services
1Relationships Between the Availability of
Infection-Related Services Availability of
Services Tailored for Subpopulations in Substance
Abuse Treatment Programs The NIDA Clinical
Trials Network
- Lawrence S. Brown, Jr., MD, MPH, FASAM
- Addiction Research and Treatment Corporation
- Clinical Associate Professor of Public Health
- Weill Medical College, Cornell University
Oral Presentation at the College on Problems of
Drug Dependence Scottsdale, Arizona - June 18,
2006
2ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
- PATIENTS AND STAFF OF THE ADDICTION RESEARCH AND
TREATMENT CORPORATION, A COMMUNITY-BASED
SUBSTANCE ABUSE SERVICE AGENCY
3ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
- Research Supported by National Institute on Drug
Abuse (NIDA) as part of a Cooperative Agreement
(1U10DA013046) with the NIDA CTN and Protocol
Team members consisting of - Steven Kritz, MD John Rotrosen, MD Jim
Robinson, MEd Edmund Bini, MD, MPH Jeff
Goldsmith, MD Dennis McCarty, PhD Donald
Calsyn, PhD Patrick McAuliffe, MBA, LADC Karen
Reese, CAC-AD - Shirley Irons Sherryl Baker, PhD Kathlene
Tracy, PhD
4GAME PLAN
- Rationale
- Main Study Description
- Disparities Secondary Analysis
5 BOTTOM LINE
- Treatment programs of various descriptions offer
an array of infection-related services some do
not. - Substance abuse treatment programs that offer
services tailored for Women Minorities were
more likely to also offer infection-related
services. - A number of hypotheses opportunities remain to
be proposed, pursued, and answered - These are preliminary results of a larger study
617 Nodes with 116 Community Treatment Agencies
Reaching into 26 States!
Drug Abuse Treatment Clinical Trials Network
Seattle
Portland
New York City
Detroit
Boston
New Haven
Denver
Long Island
Philadelphia
Cincinnati
San Francisco (CA/AZ Node)
Baltimore/Richmond
Raleigh/ Durham
Albuquerque
Los Angeles
Charleston
Miami
CTN Sites
7 STUDY SITES
- New York Node New York University, New York, NY
- South Carolina Node Medical University of South
Carolina, Charleston, SC - Florida Node University of Miami, Coral Gables,
FL - Great Lakes Node Wayne State University,
Detroit, MI - Ohio Valley Node University of Cincinnati,
Cincinnati, OH - Rocky Mountain Node University of CO Health
Sciences Center, Denver, CO - New England Node Yale University, New Haven, CT
- Delaware Valley Node University of Pennsylvania,
Philadelphia, PA - Mid-Atlantic Node Johns Hopkins Univ.,
Baltimore, MD Medical College - of
Virginia, Richmond - Pacific Region Node University of California at
Los Angeles, CA - Oregon Node Oregon Health Sciences University,
Portland, OR - Washington Node University of Washington,
Seattle, WA - Long Island Node NY State Psychiatric Institute,
New York, NY - North Carolina Node Duke University,
Raleigh/Durham, NC - Southwest Node University of New Mexico,
Albuquerque, NM - Northern New England Node McLean Hospital,
Belmont, MA - California-Arizona Node University of California
at San Francisco, CA
8 MAIN STUDY RATIONALE
- HIV/HCV/STI major causes of excess morbidity and
mortality in the US - Substance abuse a major vehicle for the
transmission of infection - Scope of, and challenges to identifying,
counseling, and treating persons with these
infections in substance abuse treatment will
assist in developing effective interventions
9 IMPORTANT ABREVIATIONS
- HIV Human Immunodeficiency Virus
- AIDS Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome
- HCV Hepatitis C Virus
- STI Sexually Transmitted Infections
- CTP Community Treatment Program
- CTN Clinical Trials Network
- SOP Standard Operating Procedures
- IRB Institutional (Human Subject) Review Board
10 IMPORTANT DEFINITIONS
- Treatment Program vs. NIDA CTN CTP
- Services Assessed
- Provider Education
- Patient Education
- Patient Risk Assessment
- Patient Counseling
- Patient Medical History Physical Exam
- Patient Biological Testing
- Patient Treatment
- Patient Monitoring
- Medical vs. Non-Medical Clinical Staff
- Expert Clinical Staff
11IMPORTANT DEFINITIONS
Service A
Service A
Service A
Service B
Service C
Service E
Service D
12MAIN STUDY PRIMARY OBJECTIVES
- TO DESCRIBE
- Range of Infection-Related Services Available
- CTP Characteristics (funding, staffing)
- Clinician Characteristics (training, knowledge,
behavior) - Opinions
- Perceived Barriers to Providing Infection-Related
Services - State Regulatory Guidelines
- TO EXAMINE ASSOCIATIONS BETWEEN
- CTPs Availability of Selected Infection Services
- Other Constructs Listed Above
13MAIN STUDY DESIGN AND POPULATION
- STUDY DESIGN
- 3 Cross-sectional Surveys
- Descriptive Exploratory
- STUDY POPULATION
- CTP Administrators
- CTP Clinicians
- Administrators of State Health Departments and
State Substance Abuse Agencies
14ETHICAL, REGULATORY ADMINISTRATIVE
CONSIDERATIONS
- Expedited IRB Approval
- Waiver of Informed Consent
- Training for Node Protocol Managers
15 STUDY PROCEDURES
- Node Protocol Managers
- Information Sheet In Lieu of Informed Consent
- Survey Administration
- Paper or Electronic
- Central data acquisition
16Administrator Surveys
Administrator completes survey online or mails to
Data Center Administrator enters contact
information for Clinicians
Contact CTP Directors for Treatment Program and
Administrator contact information
Ensure IRB approval
Survey materials mailed to Administrators
Data Center contacts Administrators that have not
completed the survey or Clinician contact
information within 30 days
Node Protocol Manager contacts Administrators
that have not responded within two weeks
Data Center contacts Administrators to resolve
any data queries
After four weekly attempts, Administrators
flagged as non-responders by the Data Center
Node Protocol Managers contact non-responder Admin
istrators weekly
For Administrators that refuse to participate or
still have not responded after two additional
weeks, the Node Protocol Manager alerts the Node
Principal Investigator
17MEASUREMENTS ANALYTICAL METHODS
- SAMPLING METHODOLOGYAt Each CTP
- All Expert Clinicians Designated by the CTP
- 10 randomly sampled Non-Expert Clinicians,
- in a ratio of MedicalNon-Medical reflecting
that of - the CTPs clinical staff
- ANALYTIC METHODOLOGIES
- Experts will be analyzed separately
- Clinicians may decline next randomly
- selected person will be asked to participate
18STATISTICAL ELEMENTS
- Sample Size and Precision of the Estimated Mean
- Analytic Plan
- Descriptive stats for survey variables
- Principal Component or Cluster or Factor Analysis
to group and reduce the number of variables - Structural Equation Models to test for
associations
19SURVEY RETURNS
- 269 administrators responded (84) out of 319
substance abuse program administrators surveyed
from 95 CTPs in the NIDA CTN, covering 26 states
DC - 1719 clinicians of 2207 targeted (78)
- At least one substance abuse or health department
administrator from 48 states and the District of
Columbia (96)
20Characteristics of Treatment Programs
Percentages do not total 100 due to rounding
and non-respondents
21Characteristics of Treatment Programs
Percentages do not total 100 due to rounding
and non-respondents Responses were not mutually
exclusive for this item
22SECONDARY ANALYSIS
- LIMITED TO RESPONSES FROM ADMINISTRATOR SURVEYS
- TO REPORT THE AVAILABILITY OF SUBSTANCE ABUSE
TREATMENT SERVICES SPECIFICALLY DESIGNED FOR - Women
- Children
- Teens
- Minorities (Black/African American,
Hispanic/Latino, Indian/Eskimo, Asian,
Hawaiian/Pacific Islanders)
23SECONDARY ANALYSIS (CONTD)
- TO REPORT THE AVAILABILITY OF SERVICES
SPECIFICALLY DESIGNED WOMEN MINORITIES IN
TREATMENT PROGRAMS OFFERING INFECTION-RELATED
SERVICES - TO REPORT THE AVAILABILITY OF INFECTION RELATED
SERVICES IN TREATMENT PROGRAMS WITH SERVICES
TAILORED FOR WOMEN MINORITIES
24SUBSTANCE ABUSE TREATMENT PROGRAMS OFFERING
SERVICES SPECIFICALLY FOR WOMEN AND MINORITIES
25ARE SERVICES FOR POPULATIONS SUFFERING FROM
DISPARATIES MORE PREVALENT IN TREATMENT PROGRAMS
WITH INFECTION-RELATED SERVICES?
26SERVICES TARGETED FOR SUBPOPULATIONS IN TREATMENT
PROGRAMS WITH HIV/AIDS-RELATED SERVICES NIDA CTN
27SERVICES TARGETED FOR SUBPOPULATIONS IN TREATMENT
PROGRAMS WITH HCV-RELATED SERVICES NIDA CTN
28SERVICES TARGETED FOR SUBPOPULATIONS IN TREATMENT
PROGRAMS WITH STI-RELATED SERVICES NIDA CTN
29ARE INFECTION-RELATED MORE PREVALENT IN TREATMENT
PROGRAMS OFFERING SERVICES FOR POPULATIONS
SUFFERING FROM DISPARATIES ?
30HIV/AIDS-RELATED SERVICES IN PROGRAMS WITH
SERVICES TARGETED FOR SUBPOPULATIONS NIDA CTN
31HCV-RELATED SERVICES IN PROGRAMS WITH SERVICES
TARGETED FOR SUBPOPULATIONS NIDA CTN
32STI-RELATED SERVICES IN PROGRAMS WITH SERVICES
TARGETED FOR SUBPOPULATIONS NIDA CTN
33LIMITATIONS
- Innate drawbacks of secondary analysis
- Lack of detailed description of services tailored
for women and minorities - No date on utilization, cost, efficiency, or
effectiveness of subpopulation-tailored services
or infection-related services.
34SUMMARY
- Substance Abuse Treatment Services Tailored for
Women were Available in - 75 or more in substance abuse treatment programs
offering any infection-related service. - Substance Abuse Treatment Services Tailored for
African Americans and Hispanics were Available
in - more than 50 of substance abuse treatment
programs offering treatment or monitoring
infection-related services
35SUMMARY
- Of Treatment Programs with services tailored for
women and minorities - Infection-related services more prevalent in
programs with services tailored for AA
Hispanics than women - Non-medical infection services more prevalent
than medical infection services - HIV-related services more prevalent than HCV or
STI-related services
36NEXT STEPS
- Tests for significance
- Generate additional hypotheses for testing
37 FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT THIS STUDY
- PEER-REVIEWED PUBLICATIONS
- Brown LS. et. al., Journal of Substance Abuse
Treatment, 200630 315-321 - CONTACTING STUDY PERSONNEL
- Dr. Brown, the Lead Investigator
lbrown_at_artcny.org - Steven Kritz, MD the Project Director
skritz_at_artcny.org