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This is a two-group randomized controlled trial conducted at five hospitals across the U.S. designed to test the effectiveness of an Integrated infectious diseases/Substance Use Disorder outpatient clinic (IC) compared to treatment as usual aimed at reducing infection related readmissions and improving health outcomes in people hospitalized with an infection related to injecting opioids or stimulants.
Full description
This is a phase III two arm randomized controlled trial to determine the impact and Integrated infectious diseases (ID) and Substance Use Disorder outpatient clinic (IC) compared to treatment as usual on infection related rehospitalization in individuals hospitalized with infections due to injecting opioids or Stimulants, in the 6 month time period after discharge. This study includes both cost effectiveness and implementation outcomes.
(1) IC will provide facilitated linkage to a clinic providing medical treatment aimed at treating substance use disorder (SUD), resolving the index infection, treating existing ID complications of OUD (HIV, HCV, wounds) and preventing subsequent infections by providing accessible care for infectious diseases and medication for OUD (MOUD) treatment that is integrated into a single appointment and co-located at a single site (either in person or via telemedicine) for a minimum of monthly appointments over a 6 month time period. A feature of the IC will be weekly care coordination meetings between the ID and MOUD providers.
The study will recruit patients during hospitalization for an infection due to injecting opioids or stimulants at four hospital systems (five hospitals) and randomly assign approximately 304 inpatients in 1:1 ratio to IC vs TAU.
Participants will be followed for 12 months.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Qualifying infections:
Exclusion criteria
1. Infection due to a cause other than injection drug use, per determination of a site PI.
2. Inability to provide consent due to circumstance (e.g., sedated, intubated), language, or cognitive impairment.
3. Unwilling to provide informed consent 4. Unable to receive potential interventions due to geography 5. On comfort measures or planned for discharge to hospice care 6. Incarcerated at the time of hospitalization 7. Other criteria at the discretion of the site investigator
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
304 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Rachel Silk
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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