Background: Post-discharge support is a key component of effective treatment for hospitalized smokers, but few hospitals provide it. Many hospitals and care settings fax-refer smokers to quitlines for follow-up; however, less than half of fax-referred smokers are successfully contacted and enrolled in quitline services. "Warm handoff" is a novel approach to care transitions in which health care providers directly link patients with substance abuse problems with specialists, using face-to-face or phone transfer. Warm handoff achieves very high rates of treatment enrollment for these vulnerable groups.
Methods: The aim of this study-"EQUIP" (Enhancing Quitline Utilization among In-Patients)-is to determine the effectiveness, and cost-effectiveness, of warm handoff versus fax referral for linking hospitalized smokers with tobacco quitlines. This study employs a two-arm, individually randomized design. It is set in two large Kansas hospitals that have dedicated tobacco treatment interventionists on staff. At each site, smokers who wish to remain abstinent after discharge will be randomly assigned to groups. For patients in the fax group, staff will provide standard in-hospital intervention and will fax-refer patients to the state tobacco quitline for counseling post-discharge. For patients in the warm handoff group, staff will provide brief in-hospital intervention and immediate warm handoff: staff will call the state quitline, notify them that a warm handoff inpatient from Kansas is on the line, then transfer the call to the patients' mobile or bedside hospital phone for quitline enrollment and an initial counseling session. Following the quitline session, hospital staff provides a brief check-back visit. Outcome measures will be assessed at 1, 6, and 12 months post enrollment. Costs are measured to support cost-effectiveness analyses. We hypothesize that warm handoff, compared to fax referral, will improve care transitions for tobacco treatment, enroll more participants in quitline services, and lead to higher quit rates. We also hypothesize that warm handoff will be more cost-effective from a societal perspective.
Discussion: If successful, this project offers a low-cost solution for more efficiently linking millions of hospitalized smokers with effective outpatient treatment-smokers that might otherwise be lost in the transition to outpatient care.
Trial Registration: Clinical Trials Registration NCT01305928.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3495904 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1745-6215-13-127 | DOI Listing |
New Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) cases continue to disproportionately burden cisgender Black/African American women in the United States due to a confluence of structural and systemic factors. Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) is a safe and effective HIV prevention option, yet there is a striking gap between PrEP eligibility and uptake among cisgender Black women. The current study evaluates a novel warm handoff process in a hospital emergency department setting linking eligible women to local PrEP clinics within 72 hours of hospital discharge in a large southwestern metropolitan city.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCureus
October 2024
Division of General Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, USA.
Background: Compared to inpatient care transitions, end-of-year resident continuity clinic panel transitions affect a greater number of patients, yet warm handoffs occur less often.
Objective: We developed a program-wide curriculum to implement warm handoffs (defined as in-person or virtual via videoconference) for high-risk continuity clinic patients between graduating and incoming residents.
Methods: The warm handoff intervention was phased in at different clinic sites over the study period and ultimately implemented program-wide across nine affiliated continuity clinics.
Prim Health Care Res Dev
October 2024
Henry Ford Health, Behavioral Health, Detroit, MI, USA.
Background: Although psychological interventions can be used to improve chronic pain management, underserved individuals (i.e., racially minoritized and socioeconomically disadvantaged) may be less likely to engage in such services.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Gen Intern Med
October 2024
Department of Population Health, NYU Grossman School of Medicine, 180 Madison Avenue, New York, NY, 10065, USA.
Background: Despite proliferation of acute-care interventions to initiate medications for opioid use disorder (MOUD), significant challenges remain to supporting care continuity following discharge. Research is needed to inform effective hospital strategies to support patient transitions to ongoing MOUD in the community.
Objective: To inform a taxonomy of care transition strategies to support MOUD continuity from hospital to community-based settings and assess their perceived impact and feasibility among experts in the field.
Issues Ment Health Nurs
November 2024
School of Nursing, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA.
Purpose: As primary care (PC) clinics seek to integrate behavioral health (BH) services into patient care, it is crucial to understand the experiences of the clinic team and the impact on workflow and well-being. This study was designed to identify perspectives and experiences of nurse practitioner-led PC teams as they implemented a behavioral health integration (BHI) model into their Federally Qualified Health Center PC practices.
Methods: We conducted in-depth qualitative interviews with staff members at three clinic sites that implemented BHI.
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