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General practitioners tackle complex addictions: how complex interventions can assist in dealing with addiction

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 August 2016

J. Klimas*
Affiliation:
British Columbia Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS, St. Paul’s Hospital, Vancouver, BC, Canada Department of Medicine, University of British Columbia, St. Paul’s Hospital, Vancouver, BC, Canada School of Medicine, Coombe Healthcare Centre, University College Dublin, Dolphins Barn, Dublin, Ireland
*
*Address for correspondence: J. Klimas, MSc, PhD, Associate Fellowship Director, Canada Addiction Medicine Research Fellowship, BC Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS, University of British Columbia, St. Paul’s Hospital, 608-1081 Burrard Street, Vancouver, BC, Canada, V6Z 1Y6. (Email: jan.klimas@ucd.ie)
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Abstract

Objectives

Substance use disorder treatment is a complex problem. Complex problems require complex interventions, ideally tested via randomised controlled trials.

Methods

Complex interventions are best developed in stages, using established implementation frameworks.

Results and Conclusions

Starting with a historical patient case study, we explore how treatment of this challenging population group has been approached, how an evidence-based framework has informed formulation of a complex health intervention and how this has been progressed via the UK’s Medical Research Council (MRC) approach.

Type
Perspective Piece
Copyright
© College of Psychiatrists of Ireland 2016 

So there he was, with the boy’s head in his hands. The boy was 12, but looked no more than 10 years old. He was deeply jaundiced and in a heroin withdrawal (Ryan et al. Reference Ryan, Arthurs, Kelly and Fielding1982). It was 1981; Fergus O’Kelly was a family physician at the Coombe Family Practice in the inner city Dublin, Ireland.

Three years ago, there was no drug problem. As the shocked O’Kelly wrote in a report to the authorities: ‘During this period and especially the last eighteen months there has developed a widespread and very serious drug problem’ (O’Kelly et al. Reference O’Kelly, O’Doherty, Bury and O’Callaghan1986). He knew this was a burning, complex issue, but where to start? What aspect of the problem to address first? Is it the overall heroin epidemic? How to handle overdose in medical settings? How to prevent and/or intervene in drug problems? This article offers a perspective on the development and evaluation of complex interventions in the context of services for substance use disorders within the healthcare system, according to the UK’s Medical Research Council’s recommendations and following experiences of Dr O’Kelly and his successors.

Complex problems require complex interventions, ideally tested via randomised controlled trials. Designs of trials to ‘evaluate the benefits of specialist stroke units’, or clinical guidelines, are good examples (Campbell et al. Reference Campbell, Fitzpatrick, Haines, Kinmonth, Sandercock, Spiegelhalter and Tyrer2000). By translating scientific knowledge to advance the practice, controlled evaluations of complex interventions bridge the implementation gulf between scientists and practitioners. That is exactly what O’Kelly desired. His problem needed improvements at the level of patient, access to treatment, organisation of care and coordination between services.

Complex interventions are best fashioned in stages, says the Medical Research Council in UK. They came up with a six-step recipe for ‘cooking’ complex interventions (Campbell et al. Reference Campbell, Fitzpatrick, Haines, Kinmonth, Sandercock, Spiegelhalter and Tyrer2000). The recipe can help researchers and providers define their interventions and evaluate their implementation.

First, explore the background. Address the design of the intervention and potential confounders. For example, Cochrane researchers from University of Limerick queried scientific literature to see what works for people who drink heavily and use other drugs at the same time (Klimas et al. Reference Klimas, Tobin, Field, O’Gorman, Glynn, Keenan and Cullen2014). Finding little to suggest what worked best, they asked the experts (Klimas et al. Reference Klimas, Cullen and Field2014). Both the scientific evidence and the experts’ opinions informed clinical guideline for primary care. Meanwhile, their colleague, Schaffalitzky et al. (Reference Schaffalitzky, Leahy, Armstrong, Gavin, Latham, McNicholas and Cullen2015) found that ‘nobody really gets it’ for disadvantaged, at-risk adolescents and young adults with mental health problems. Both teams discovered cracks in the healthcare system, such as negative attitudes, that hindered care of vulnerable populations and could inform the next steps in the development process.

Second, understand how your new intervention works. What are the underlying mechanisms and how do they interact with each other? Ryder et al. (Reference Ryder, Cullen, Barry, Bury, Keenan and Smyth2009) found that one-third of people attending general practitioners (GPs) in Ireland for addiction-related care were also heavy drinkers. Because many of them had Hepatitis C infection, their livers were in danger. In this example, the medicine that the patients received for their opioid addiction (methadone) did not keep them drug-free. Every week, a person overdosed on opioids, as another team of researchers from Centre for Emergency Medicine found (Klimas et al. Reference Klimas, O’Reilly, Egan, Tobin and Bury2014). What’s more, most of these overdoses happened in one small area – a hotspot. Observational studies like these help us assess the current practice or map the environmental and structural factors determining the health of people with substance use disorders. The clinical guideline created in the first phase of the process was ideal for developing a complex solution that would target excessive drinking by people receiving methadone in primary care. Since heavy drinking was linked to higher risks of overdose and death in this population, using clinical guideline in the complex solution would also reduce the risk of overdoses (Johnson et al. Reference Johnson, Dong, Ahamad, Hayashi, Milloy, Kerr and Wood2015). The guideline advised GPs to ask, assist, advice and arrange referrals specialists for patients with serious alcohol use disorders because of the weakness of evidence for medication-assisted therapy for this patient population attending primary care.

Next, run the new intervention in a handful of practices. Pilot tests may or may not have control groups and are generally underpowered to test the interventions. What’s the point of such studies? – to determine interventions’ feasibility. The clinical guidelines, as part of the new complex intervention to be tested in a pilot project, recommended psychosocial interventions. Are psychosocial interventions for drinking among people who also use other illicit drugs feasible? An initiative called The Problem Drug Use In General Practice, formed from the same experts who developed the clinical guideline, turned to patients and their GPs for help with this question (Field et al. Reference Field, Klimas, Barry, Bury, Keenan, Smyth and Cullen2013). Only a few GPs agreed to participate in a pilot trial, but adhering to the MRC’s stepwise approach yielded key ingredients for the process of development and evaluation of complex intervention (i.e. clinical guideline with manualised support and education), including numbers needed to screen and recruit for a definitive trial.

Fourth, run a definitive clinical trial. For example, in such a trial, you may want to check whether primary care providers are willing to and actually use the clinical guidelines – your newly designed complex solution. Back at the Coombe Family Practice in Dublin, an earlier guideline for treating Hepatitis C (HCV), by Dr Cullen’s group, recommended patients with addiction get their treatment in primary care (Cullen et al. Reference Cullen, Stanley, Langton, Kelly, Staines and Bury2006). This kind of guideline could have helped the desperate O’Kelly treat his 12-year-old patient. Although many other guidelines were published earlier, nobody used them.

In a setting where integration of services and comprehensive care is paramount, a subsequent large-scale controlled trial showed that doctors using the new guidelines, and receiving support in following them, were better serving their patients than the control group. The key was to sustain the momentum once the clinicians were willing to actively manage HCV in primary care.

Last, help clinicians keep using the intervention when the researchers leave. The main ingredients in the last step of the recipe are practical impacts. Is your staff happy with the sudden influx of complex patients? Dr Bury’s research team in Dublin introduced treatment with an opioid agonist medication, methadone, to general practice. Getting the GPs’ buy in for this treatment in the early 1990s was not easy, but none of them had concerns over patient workload, or treating opioid use disorders, 3 months later (Langton et al. Reference Langton, Hickey, Bury, Smith, O’Kelly, Barry and Bourke2000). Qualitative follow-up studies like this help make findings usable and interventions sustainable. Finding complex solutions to complex problems might also require the use of complex, more innovative methodologies. In particular, qualitative or mixed-methods approaches might explore issues of feasibility, acceptability and implementation. What are the implications for addiction-care providers in other jurisdictions? Substance use disorder treatment is a complex problem. Complex problems require complex solutions. Complex interventions are best developed in stages, using established implementation frameworks. Apart from the UK’s Framework for the phased development of complex interventions, the providers can use the Comprehensive Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR) (Damschroder et al. Reference Damschroder, Aron, Keith, Kirsh, Alexander and Lowery2009). This meta-framework attempts to unite all published implementation models. It has five major domains: intervention characteristics, outer setting, inner setting, characteristics of the individuals involved and the process of implementation. Its generic nature allows studying underlying concepts, thus overcoming barriers between specialties, nations and individual ‘theories’.

The unfortunate boy has long since gone to God. Two of his brothers and one sister are still attending the same inner-city doctor. In healthcare, we should do our best to help people. Just like the wood-fired ovens make the best pizzas, we should put our complex interventions through evaluation trials by fire too. Investments into robust, complex interventions are needed because substance use disorders are beyond simple solutions.

Acknowledgement

The author thanks Dr Bury, Dr Cullen, Dr McCarty and Dr O’Kelly for information for this article and for their dedicated mentorship.

Financial Support

This article was written, in part, thanks to funding ELEVATE: Irish Research Council International Career Development Fellowship – co-funded by Marie Cure Actions (ELEVATEPD/2014/6) and European Commission Grant (701698).

Conflicts of Interest

None.

Ethical Standards

The author asserts that all procedures contributing to the work described in this perspective piece comply with the ethical standards of the relevant national and institutional committee on human experimentation with the Helsinki Declaration of 1975, as revised in 2008. The institutional review board of each participating institution approved the study protocols of work described in this perspective piece. Written informed consents were obtained from all patients participating in studies described in this perspective piece.

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