Improving Linkages Between Sexual and Reproductive Health and Substance Use Providers: The Partnership to Advance Integrated Referrals

Author:

Dublin Sonya,Bermudez Dayana,Ortiz Christina,Tobier Natalie,Levy Joslyn,Hargarten Leah

Abstract

Background and Objectives: Women of reproductive age with substance use (SU) disorders have lower rates of contraceptive use and higher rates of unintended pregnancy than women without SU disorders and are less likely to access treatment than men. Integration of SU and sexual and reproductive health (SRH) services, using a model known as Screening, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Treatment (SBIRT), has been proven effective in reducing SU and improving health care equity. The SBIRT model includes screening, brief intervention (a short client-centered conversation providing an opportunity to identify/discuss concerns), and referral to treatment. The purpose of this study was to test whether an established quality improvement (QI) learning collaborative model could be used to support SU and SRH sites in implementing an SBIRT/SBIRT-like model to improve health outcomes for women. Five SRH sites and 4 SU sites across New York State participated in the Partnership to Advance Integrated Referrals (PAIR), an 18-month QI learning collaborative designed and implemented by Public Health Solutions. Methods: Six standardized mixed-methods data collection tools were used over 18 months to gather process and outcome data from over 130 QI team members and site staff and over 5000 clients. Results: By the end of PAIR, QI team members and site staff showed a reduction in bias, increased knowledge and comfort, increased rating of organizational practices related to client-centered care, and increased access to peer learning, information about best practices, and training and technical assistance. SU sites increased SRH screening from 47.9% in the first quarter of data collection to 67.4% in the final quarter and increased brief interventions from 92.5% in the first quarter to 100.0% in the final quarter. Similarly, SRH sites increased SU screening from 51.6% to 75.6% and increased brief interventions from 81.3% to 85.1%. The processes and outcomes were very different for the SU and SRH sites, and their varying successes and challenges are discussed. Making and verifying referrals remained challenging. Conclusions: The results of PAIR demonstrated the feasibility of SU and SRH sites implementing an SBIRT/SBIRT-like model when supported by a QI learning collaborative. Larger community and organizational challenges (COVID-19, staff turnover) still present barriers to improved reproductive health and SU outcomes for women.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Reference13 articles.

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