1. Building medication for opioid use disorder prescriber capacity during the opioid epidemic: Prescriber recruitment trends and methods.
- Author
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Molfenter T, Jacobson N, Kim JS, Horst J, Kim H, Madden L, Brown R, Haram E, and Knudsen HK
- Subjects
- Humans, Analgesics, Opioid therapeutic use, Opioid Epidemic, Opioid-Related Disorders drug therapy, Buprenorphine therapeutic use, Physicians
- Abstract
Introduction: Physicians are a critical clinical resource for patient care. Yet physician recruitment has been considerably understudied, particularly in substance use disorder (SUD) settings. This study proposes a conceptual model called the "Physician Recruitment Descriptive Factors Framework" to investigate the role of environmental, organizational, and individual factors in the use of physician recruitment strategies., Methods: The study setting was 75 sites that provided outpatient SUD treatment services in Florida, Ohio, and Wisconsin from 2016 to 2019. Central to the analysis is the use of five targeted physician recruitment strategies. The study investigated whether financial conditions, location (urban v. non-urban), external implementation coaching, and recruiters' roles influenced use of the targeted physician recruitment strategies., Results: During the study period, a formal plan to recruit physicians was the most common strategy used (n = 67.6 %). The director or chief executive officer (CEO) was most likely to conduct physician recruitment (n = 58.7 %). During the study, use of four of the five recruitment strategies significantly declined (at p ≤ 0.01), while the perceived need for new prescribing capacity significantly declined (p ≤ 0.01), and prescribers per site increased from 1.54 to 3.21. Sixty-four percent of this increase in prescribers was due to more physician prescribers, while 36 % was due to the onset of the ability of advanced nurse practitioners and physician assistants to prescribe buprenorphine. In year 3 of the study, the strategies most closely aligned with the current number of prescribers were conducting weekly outreach to prescriber candidates (p = .018), having a dedicated prescriber recruiter (p = .011), and having a dedicated budget for prescriber recruiting (p = .002)., Conclusions: The study describes which physician recruitment strategies SUD treatment sites used and how the need to recruit physicians for specialty treatment SUD clinics declined as prescriber capacity increased. The proposed multi-level framework provides the scaffolding for future physician recruitment research and practice., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The NIATx organizational change model was developed by the Center for Health Enhancement System Studies (CHESS) at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. Todd Molfenter, Ph.D., is a faculty member at the CHESS Center. Also, Dr. Molfenter is affiliated with the NIATx Foundation, the organization responsible for making the NIATx organizational change model available to the public. Dr. Molfenter has worked extensively with his institution to manage any conflicts of interest. The individuals who conducted the data collection and interpretation for this manuscript have no affiliation with the NIATx Foundation. Clinical Trial Registration Details: CT.gov record for 2016-0486 Intervention to Expand Opioid Use Disorder Treatment Pharmacotherapy Prescribers NCT02926482, (Copyright © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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