Influence of physician networks on the implementation of pharmaceutical alternatives to a toxic drug supply in British Columbia

Author:

Kurz Megan,Guerra-Alejos Brenda Carolina,Min Jeong Eun,Barker Brittany,Pauly Bernadette,Urbanoski Karen,Nosyk BohdanORCID

Abstract

Abstract Background Characterizing the diffusion of adopted changes in policy and clinical practice can inform enhanced implementation strategies to ensure prompt uptake in public health emergencies and other rapidly evolving disease areas. A novel guidance document was introduced at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in British Columbia (BC), Canada, which supported clinicians to prescribe opioids, stimulants, and benzodiazepines. We aimed to determine the extent to which uptake and discontinuation of an initial attempt at a prescribed safer supply (PSS) program were influenced through networks of prescribers. Methods We executed a retrospective population-based study using linked health administrative data that captured all clinicians who prescribed to at least one client with a substance use disorder from March 27, 2020, to August 31, 2021. Our main exposure was the prescribing patterns of an individuals’ peers, defined as the proportion of a prescribers’ professional network (based on shared clients), which had previously prescribed PSS, updated monthly. The primary outcome measured whether a clinician had prescribed their initial PSS prescription during a given calendar month. The secondary outcome was the discontinuation of PSS prescribing, defined as an absence for PSS prescriptions for at least 3 months. We estimated logistic regression models using generalized estimated equations on monthly repeated measurements to determine and characterize the extent to which peer networks influenced the initiation and discontinuation of PSS prescribing, controlling for network, clinician, and caseload characteristics. Innovators were defined as individuals initiating PSS prior to May 2020, and early adopters were individuals initiating PSS after. Results Among 14,137 prescribers treating clients with substance use disorder, there were 228 innovators of prescribed safer supply and 1062 early adopters through the end of study follow-up, but 653 (50.6%) were no longer prescribing by August 2021. Prescribers with over 20% of peers whom had adopted PSS had a nearly fourfold higher adjusted odds of PSS prescribing themselves (aOR: 3.79, 95% CI: (3.15, 4.56)), compared to those with no connected safer supply prescribers. Conclusions The uptake of PSS in BC was highly dependent on the behavior of prescribers’ peer networks. Future implementation strategies to support PSS or other policies would benefit from leveraging networks of prescribers.

Funder

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Ministry of Health, British Columbia

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health Informatics,Health Policy,General Medicine

Reference61 articles.

1. British Columbia Centre on Substance Use, BC Ministry of Health. Risk mitigation in the context of dual public health emergencies - interim clinical guidance. 2020.

2. Nosyk B, Slaunwhite A, Urbanoski K, Hongdilokkul N, Palis H, Lock K, et al. Evaluation of risk mitigation measures for people with substance use disorders to address the dual public health crises of COVID-19 and overdose in British Columbia: a mixed-method study protocol. BMJ Open. 2021;11(6):e048353.

3. Ministry of Mental Health and Addictions, Ministry of Health. Access to prescribed safer supply in British Columbia: policy direction: BC Ministry of Health; 2021. Available from: https://www2.gov.bc.ca/assets/gov/overdose-awareness/prescribed_safer_supply_in_bc.pdf. updated 2021/07/15.

4. British Columbia Centre on Substance Use, BC Ministry of Health, Ministry of Mental Health and Addictions. Risk mitigation in the context of dual health emergencies—interim clinical guidance: update: British Columbia Centre on Substance Use; 2022 . Available from: https://www.bccsu.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/Risk-Mitigation-Guidance-Update-February-2022.pdf.

5. British Columbia Centre on Substance Use. Webinar – safer supply pt 1. [cited 2023 Oct 4]. Available from: https://www.bccsu.ca/webinar-safer-supply-pt-1/?highlight=webinar.

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