AI Article Synopsis

  • Unhealthy alcohol use (UAU) is a major cause of early death in the U.S., and emergency departments (EDs) can play a crucial role in interventions, but they face challenges due to time and resource constraints.
  • The study aims to develop and test a text-messaging intervention for UAU in EDs by examining the barriers to staff offering it and patients accepting it, utilizing mixed methods and stakeholder engagement.
  • The research will include a pilot study to evaluate the effectiveness and feasibility of the proposed implementation strategy in several EDs, potentially providing a scalable solution for addressing UAU in healthcare settings.

Article Abstract

Background: Unhealthy alcohol use (UAU) is a leading cause of premature mortality among adults in the USA. Emergency departments (EDs) are key intervention settings for UAU but often have limited time and resources. One low-burden, scalable approach to address UAU is text-messaging interventions. Despite strong research support and promise for scalability, there is little research on how to implement such interventions in healthcare settings. The process of providers making them available to patients in an efficient way within already busy and overburdened ED workflows and patients adopting them remains a new area of research. The purpose of this three-phase study is to develop and test an implementation strategy for UAU text-messaging interventions in EDs.

Method: Our first aim is to examine barriers and facilitators to staff offering and patients accepting a text-messaging intervention in the ED using an explanatory, sequential mixed methods approach. We will examine alcohol screening data in the electronic health records of 17 EDs within a large integrated health system in the Northeast and conduct surveys among chairpersons in each. This data will be used to purposively sample 4 EDs for semi-structured interviews among 20 clinical staff, 20 patients, and 4 chairpersons. Our second aim is to conduct a stakeholder-engaged intervention mapping process to develop a multi-component implementation strategy for EDs. Our third aim is to conduct a mixed method 2-arm cluster randomized pilot study in 4 EDs that serve ~11,000 UAU patients per year to assess the feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary effectiveness of the implementation strategy. The Integrated Promoting Action on Research Implementation in Health Services framework will guide study activities.

Discussion: Low-burden technology, like text messaging, along with targeted implementation support and strategies driven by identified barriers and facilitators could sustain large-scale ED-based alcohol screening programs and provide much needed support to patients who screen positive while reducing burden on EDs. The proposed study would be the first to develop and test this targeted implementation strategy and will prepare for a larger, fully powered hybrid effectiveness-implementation trial. Findings may also be broadly applicable to implementation of patient-facing mobile health technologies.

Trial Registration: This study was registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT05350878) on 4/28/2022.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9356403PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s43058-022-00333-yDOI Listing

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