Title: Performance Measurement in Addiction Treatment Programs
1Performance Measurement in Addiction Treatment
Programs
- A series of briefings offered to state
legislatures through a collaborative effort of
the State Associations of Addiction Services,
National Conference of State Legislatures, and
the Treatment Research Institute. Funded by the
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services
Association (SAMHSA) under the Partners for
Recovery Initiative through a contract with Abt
Associates Incorporated. -
2Re-Considering Addiction Treatment
Have We Been Thinking Correctly?
3Part I
Does Anything Work?
- FDA standards of effectiveness
- Do substance abuse treatments meet those
standards?
4An FDA Perspective
A Drug is Approved for An Indication 2
-Randomized Clinical Trials Often ask for
separate investigators Placebo Control
Movement to test vs approved medication
Treatment Research Institute
5FDA-Level Evidence
- Therapies
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
- Motivational Enhancement Therapy
- Community Reinforcement and Family Training
- Behavioral Couples Therapy
- Multi Systemic Family Therapy
- 12-Step Facilitation
- Individual Drug Counseling
6FDA-Level Evidence
- Medications
- Alcohol (Disulfiram, Naltrexone, Accamprosate)
- Opiates (Naltrexone, Methadone, Buprenorphine)
- Cocaine (Disulfiram, Topiramate)
- Marijuana (Rimanoban)
- Methamphetamine Nothing Yet
7Part II
- The Specialty Care System A Customer
Perspective - Patient Survey
- Care Provided
- Infrastructure
8The Alcohol Pyramid
In Spec Treatment 1,800,000
Abuse/Dependent 18,000,000
Harmful Users ??,000,000
9Addiction Specialty Care
- 13,200 specialty programs in US
- 31 treat less than 200 patients per year
- 65 private, not for profit
- 80 primarily government funded Private
insurance lt12 - Sources NSSATS, 2002 DAunno, 2004
10Referral Sources
- Source 1990 2004
- Criminal Justice 38 59
- Employers/EAP 10 6
- Welfare/CPS 8 16
- Hosp/Phys 4 3
11Why Dont Patients Want Treatment?
Sources 4 Review Articles Rapp et al. JSAT
2005 Stanton JMFT 2004 Appel et al. AJDA
2004 Tsogia et al. JMH 2001
12Top Patient Reasons
- 1) No Problem/Can Handle 58
- 2) No Confidence in Trt 51
- 3) Bad Trt Experience 36
- 4) Abstinence-Only Goal 31
13WHY? Wont programs deliver quality care?
CANT
14Four Reasons
- a. The Infrastructure
- b. The Acute Care Model
- The Way it is Evaluated
- The State as the Only Market
15Program Infrastructure
- Phone Interviews With National Sample of 175
Programs regarding personnel, management,
information - McL, Carise Kleber JSAT, 2003
16The Treatment System
Residential 64 39 9
Outpatient 27 59 79
Methadone 9 10 12
17Program Changes In 16 Months
- 12 had closed
- 13 had changed service operation RESULT 25
FEWER PROGRAMS - 31 of the rest had been taken over, usually by
MH agencies RESULT STAFF CONFUSION
18STAFF TURNOVER!
- Counselor turnover 50 per year
- 50 of directors have been there Less Than 1
year
19Who Are the Directors ?
- 17 No College Education
- 58 Had BA Degree 20 Had a MA or MSW
- 2 Physicians in 175 programs
- 28 NOT Working Full Time
- Most had been clinicians _at_ program
20Information Systems
- Modest Computer Availability
- Mostly For Administrative Work
- 80 Had a Computer
- 50 had Web Access
- Still very little computer/software availability
for CLINICAL STAFF
21Other Staff
- 54 Had no physician 34 Had P/T
physician 39 Had a Nurse (part of full time) - lt 25 Had a SW or a Psychologist
- Major professional group - Counselors
22Kerwin et al. 2006
Regulations for license certification All 50
states and Washington, D.C. Both substance abuse
and mental health counselors
23Degree Required?
Substance Mental Abuse Health No
Degree required 13 0 lt BA min 77
2 Masters min 10 98
24The Acute Care Model
- The Acute Care Model
- Treatment Models for Other Illnesses
25 A Nice Simple Rehab Model
Substance Abusing Patient
Medications, Therapies, JCAHO, CARF, WC Ev. Based
Prac.
Treatment
NTOMS Sample of 250 Programs
Non- Substance Abusing Patient
26 ASSUMPTIONS
- Some fixed amount or duration of treatment will
resolve the problem - Clinical efforts put toward correctly placing
patients and getting them to complete treatment - Evaluation of effectiveness should occur
following completion - Poor outcome means failure
27How Do Other Treatments Work? Chronic Illness
Continuing Care
28A Continuing Care Model
Primary Care
Specialty Care
Primary Continuing Care
29In Chronic Illnesses.
1 The effects of treatment do not last very
long after care stops 2 Patients who are out
of treatment/contact are at elevated risk for
relapse
30So, For Treatment.
1 One goal is to retain patients at an
appropriate level of care and monitoring 2
Another goal is to prepare patients to do well in
the next level of care 3 - The effects of
treatment are evaluated during treatment not
post-discharge
31 But Addiction Isnt Like Other Diseases .Is
it?
32 A Comparison With Three Chronic Medical Illnesses
- Hypertension
- Diabetes
- Asthma
33 Why These?
- No Doubt They Are Illnesses
- All Chronic Conditions
- Influenced by Genetic, Metabolic and
Behavioral Factors - No Cures - But Effective Treatments Are
Available
34Heritability Estimates Twin Studies
Eye Color 1.00
ASTHMA (adult only) .35 - .70 DIABETES (insulin
dep) .70 - .95 (males) HYPERTENSION .25 - .50
(males)
ALCOHOL (dependence) .55 - .65 (males) OPIATE
(dependence) .35 - .50 (males)
35HYPERTENSION
Adherence to medication regime lt
60 Adherence to diet and exercise lt 30
Retreated in 12 months 50 - 60 (by
Physician, ER, or Hospital)
Treatment Research Institute
36DIABETES (Adult Onset)
Adherence to medication regime lt
50 Adherence to diet and exercise lt 30
Retreated in 12 months 30 - 50 (by
Physician, ER, or Hospital)
Treatment Research Institute
37ASTHMA
Adherence to medication lt 30
Retreated in 12 months 60 - 80 (by
Physician, ER, or Hospital)
Treatment Research Institute
38RELAPSE
Predictive Factors - All 3 Illnesses
1 - Lack of Adherence to diet, medications, or
behavior change 2 - Low Socioeconomic status 3
- Low Family Supports 4 - Psychiatric
Co-Morbidity
Sources Natl Ctr Health Stats Harrison, 13th
Ed. 30 studies
39The Way it is Evaluated
I
- Implications of How We Evaluate
- Differences in Outcome Expectations
40If many or most cases of addiction are really
chronic then 1) We may be evaluating the
effectiveness of addiction treatments in the
wrong way.
41- Studies show few differences between
- Brief and Intensive Treatments
- Inpatient and Outpatient Treatments
- Conceptually Different Treatments
- Matched and Mismatched Trt.
- Gender or Culturally Oriented Trt.
42 Outcome In Hypertension
Pre - During - Post
Treatment Research Institute
43 Outcome In Addiction
Pre - Post
Treatment Research Institute
44Maybe this is why
45- Studies show few differences between
- Brief and Intensive Treatments
- Inpatient and Outpatient Treatments
- Conceptually Different Treatments
- Matched and Mismatched Trt.
- Gender or Culturally Oriented Trt.
46What Can be Done in Programs?
- Serving the Customer
- Helping the Counselor
47 Demands on Counselor
- Do Comprehensive Assessement
- Develop Individual Treatment Plan
- Provide Services to Meet Needs of Patient
- Be Culturally and Gender Sensitive
48 Computer Assisted System for Patient Assessment
and ReferralCASPAR
- Start with Computer Assisted ASI
- Reduced training administration time
- Generates, state forms, JCAHO narrative and
treatment plan - Add Free or Low Cost Service Referral
- From United Ways First Call for Help
- Easy match of services to problems
49Problem-Services Linkage
- Alcohol
- Drugs
- Medical
- Employment
- Family
- Psychiatric
- Legal
From United Way
GED training Resume Development Job
Finding Mentoring Sessions Training Loans
Treatment Research Institute
50Problem-Services Linkage
- Alcohol
- Drugs
- Medical
- Employment
- Family
- Psychiatric
- Legal
From United Way
Domestic Violence Parenting Skills Specialized
Babysitting Safe Housing Legal Aid
Treatment Research Institute
51Results of CASPAR Training
- Counselors now get ASI
- Now seen as part of engagement
- They love United Way services
- Most counselors use it for most patients
- Many counselors use it themselves
- Patients who get more services stay longer
52Mean Number of Services Received
53Percent Retained at 30 Days
54Percent Retained at 60 Days
55Average Percent Positive
trend
56The State as the Only Market
- Regulating Treatment Process
- Vs
- Purchasing Results
57Addiction Specialty Care
- 13,200 programs in US
- 65 private, not for profit
- 80 primarily government funded Private
insurance lt12 - 31 treat less than 200 patients per year
- Sources NSSATS, 2002 DAunno, 2004
58State of Delaware
Performance Contracting
59 Delaware Situation 2002
- 11 Outpatient Providers
- Limited Budget
- No success with outcome evaluation
- Providers wont/cant use EBPs
60 Delawares Performance Based Contracting
- 2002 Budget 90 of 2001 Budget
- Opportunity to Make 106
- One Criterion Active Participation
- Audit for accuracy and access
61 Delawares ResultsYears 1 2
- One program lost contract
- Two new providers entered, did well
- Mental Health and Employment Programs
- Programs worked together
- First, common sense business practices
- Second, incentives for teams or counselors
- 5 programs learned MI and MET
62Utilization
63 Attending
64Philadelphia
Contracting for Public Health
Value Eliminating Detox-Only
65Detox-Only Episodes
- 40 70 of all Addiction Treatment Episodes are
Detox-Only - Cost 1,750 - 2,400 per episode
- Re-Detox only tracked by 7 states
- Average 40 (23 78 range)
- 28 admitted 3 times/yr
2000 Inspector Gen Report
66Detox-Only Inpatient Detoxification 1-year
Follow-UpDavison et al., J. Add. Dis. 25, 2006
Treatment Research Institute
67Inpatient DetoxificationShort Term Results
- 92 completed
- All prescribed Opt. Care Naltrex.
- 20 left AMA
- 73 Attended 1 or more sessions 65
- 25 Still Attending at 60 Days 22
- 5 Opiate free at 90 days 3
John Davison et al., J. Add Dis. 25(4), 2006
68Inpatient Detoxification1-Year Results
- 92 Completed Detoxification
- 23 Readmitted for Detox 21
- 21 Admitted to ER 19
- 5 Died 5
John Davison et al., J. Add Dis. 25(4), 2006
69Contracting for Continuity
- State is the market for D-O
- State could make market for continuity
- 85 Detox-only reimbursement
- 115 Detox5 sessions of OPT
- 100 Detox 5 days Residential
70CONCLUSIONS
- Specialty care system is in trouble
- Customers Do Not Want the Product
- Ruled by Gov, Not Market Forces
- System Change is Necessary
- Public Health Value thru Patient Value
- Treatment Programs MUST Change
- Meet Customer Needs Offer New Options
Purchasers CAN
71CONCLUSIONS
- Specialty care system is in trouble
- Customers Do Not Want the Product
- Ruled by Gov, Not Market Forces
- System Change is Necessary
- Public Health Value thru Patient Value
- Treatment Programs MUST Change
- Meet Customer Needs Offer New Options
Purchasers CAN
72 - The End -