Building an inpatient addiction medicine consult service in Sudbury, Canada: preliminary data and lessons learned in the era of COVID-19

Author:

Leary Tara,Aubin Natalie,Marsh David C.,Roach Michael,Nikodem Paola,Caswell Joseph M.,Irwin Bridget,Pillsworth Emma,Mclelland Maureen,Long Brad,Bhagavatula Sastry,Eibl Joseph K,Morin Kristen A.

Abstract

Abstract Objective The goal of this study was to (1) Describe the patient population of a newly implemented addiction medicine consult service (AMCS); (2) Evaluate referrals to community-based addiction support services and acute health service use, over time; (3) Provide lessons learned. Methods A retrospective observational analysis was conducted at Health Sciences North in Sudbury, Ontario, Canada, with a newly implemented AMCS from November 2018 and July 2021. Data were collected using the hospital’s electronic medical records. The outcomes measured included the number of emergency department visits, inpatient admissions, and re-visits over time. An interrupted time-series analysis was performed to measure the effect of AMCS implementation on acute health service use at Health Sciences North. Results A total of 833 unique patients were assessed through the AMCS. A total of 1,294 referrals were made to community-based addiction support services, with the highest proportion of referrals between August and October 2020. The post-intervention trend for ED visits, ED re-visits, ED length of stay, inpatient visits, re-visits, and inpatient length of stay did not significantly differ from the pre-intervention period. Conclusion Implementation of an AMCS provides a focused service for patients using with substance use disorders. The service resulted in a high referral rate to community-based addiction support services and limited changes in health service usage.

Funder

Northern Ontario Academic Medicine Association

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Health Policy

Reference44 articles.

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