lost in translation: understanding and confronting the research to practice gap

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Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap Jack B. Stein, LCSW, Ph.D. Deputy Director Division of Epidemiology, Services, and Prevention Research National Institute on Drug Abuse ASAM Conference May 2006

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Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap. Jack B. Stein, LCSW, Ph.D. Deputy Director Division of Epidemiology, Services, and Prevention Research National Institute on Drug Abuse. ASAM Conference May 2006. Drug Abuse & Addiction. NIDA. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

Lost in Translation:Understanding and Confronting the

Research to Practice Gap

Jack B. Stein, LCSW, Ph.D.Deputy Director

Division of Epidemiology, Services, and Prevention Research

National Institute on Drug Abuse

ASAM ConferenceMay 2006

Page 2: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

Bringing the fullpower of Science to bear on…

Bringing the fullpower of Science to bear on…

Drug Abuse & Addiction Drug Abuse & Addiction

NIDANIDANIDANIDA

Page 3: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

Priority Areas for NIDA

Treatment Interventions

Prevention Research (Children and Adolescents)

HIV/AIDS Research

Translation

Page 4: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

% of Students Reporting Any Illicit Drug Use

(Past Year)

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

75 77 79 81 83 85 87 89 91 93 95 97 99 01 03 05

8th Grade 10th Grade 12th Grade

* Denotes significant difference

between recent peak year and current year.

*

*

*

Page 5: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

% of High School Seniors Reporting Nonmedical Use of Sedatives

(Past Year)

0

2

4

6

8

10

91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05

12th Grade

* Denotes significant increase

2001-2005.

**

Page 6: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

Prevalence of Drugs Among High School Seniors

Prevalence of Drugs Among High School Seniors

* Percentage reporting use in past year. **Nonmedical use.

Drug Prev.* Drug Prev.*Marijuana/Hashish 33.6 MDMA (Ecstasy) 3.0Vicodin** 9.5 Methamphetamine 2.5Amphetamines 8.6 "Ice" 2.3Sedatives** 7.2 Crack 1.9Tranquilizers** 6.8 LSD 1.8OxyContin** 5.5 Ketamine 1.6Cocaine (any form) 5.1 Steroid** 1.5Inhalants 5.0 PCP 1.3Cocaine Powder 4.5 Rohypnol 1.2Ritalin** 4.4 GHB 1.1

Page 7: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

Methamphetamine:Our Next Drug Epidemic?

Page 8: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

0

50000

100000

150000

200000

250000

300000

93 94 95 96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03

Primary Methamphetamine Admission Primary Cocaine Admissions

Primary Methamphetamine and Primary Cocaine Treatment Admissions

(1993 – 2003)

Page 9: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

% of Primary Methamphetamine Treatment Admissions (Excluding Alcohol)

5.6

15.8

15.9

20.9

22.1

30.9

50.3

57.8

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70

St. Louis

Atlanta

Seattle

Denver

Mpls./St. Paul

Los Angeles

San Diego

Hawaii

SOURCE: CEWG January 2006 reports on State and local data

Page 10: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

What Research-Based Findings/Practices Most Need to

be Translated into Practice?

Page 11: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

Neuroscience is revealing much about the brain and the relationship to addiction, relapse, and recovery

Page 12: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

Addiction

DRUG

Environment

Biology/GenesBiology/

EnvironmentInteraction

Biological Factors Interact with Environmental Factors to Produce Addiction

Page 13: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

Healthy Heart Diseased Heart

Decreased Heart Metabolism in Heart Disease PatientDecreased Heart Metabolism in Heart Disease Patient

Addiction is a Disease of the BrainAs other diseases, it affects tissue function

Control Cocaine Abuser

Decreased Brain Metabolism in Drug Abuse Patient

Sources: From the laboratories of Drs. N. Volkow and H. SchelbertSources: From the laboratories of Drs. N. Volkow and H. Schelbert

High

Low

Page 14: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap
Page 15: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

3. Effective treatment should attend to multiple needs of the individual.

Intake Processing / Assessment

Treatment Plan

Pharmacotherapy

Continuing Care

Clinical and Case Management

Self-Help / Peer Support Groups

Behavioral Therapy and Counseling

Substance Use Monitoring

Detoxification

Child Care Services

Vocational Services

Medical Services

Educational ServicesAIDS / HIV

Services

Family Services

Financial Services

Legal Services

Mental Health Services

Housing / Transportation

Services

Page 16: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

4. Recovery from drug addiction requires effective treatment followed by management of the disorder over time.

Page 17: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

Substance Use Careers Last for Decades C

um

ula

tive

Su

rviv

al

Years from first use to 1+ years abstinence

302520151050

1.0

.9

.8

.7

.6

.5

.4

.3

.2

.10.0

Median duration of 27 years!

Scott & Dennis, (1998)

Page 18: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

Treatment Careers Last for Years C

um

ula

tive

Su

rviv

al

Years from first Tx to 1+ years abstinence

2520151050

1.0

.9

.8

.7

.6

.5

.4

.3

.2

.10.0

Median duration of 9 years

and 3-4 episodes of care

Page 19: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

Drug Dependence as a Chronic IllnessDrug Dependence as a Chronic Illness

Drug Drug DependenceDependence

Type I Type I DiabetesDiabetes

Hyper-Hyper-tensiontension

AsthmaAsthma

40 -

60%

40 -

60%

30 -

50%

30 -

50% 50

- 7

0%50

- 7

0%

50 -

70%

50 -

70%

Per

cen

t o

f P

atie

nts

Wh

o R

elap

seP

erce

nt

of

Pat

ien

ts W

ho

Rel

apse

O’Brien & McLellan, 1996, Lancet; McLellan et al. 2000, JAMA

Page 20: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

ClinicalPractices

Initial Services

Engage & Sustain

TherapeuticInterventions

Assessment

•Prescription for Services

•Psychosocial Intervention (MI, MET, CBT, Contingency Mgt, CRT, 12-Step Facilitation, Structured Family/Couples)

•Pharmacotherapy

•Patient Engagement and Retention•Recovery/Chronic Care Management

•Screening •Initial brief Intervention

Chronic Disease Model

Page 21: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

Recovery Management Checkup

• “Linkage Manager” who conducts motivational intervention and provides linkages

• Motivational Intervention:

- Provide personalized feedback

- Recognize problem and consider return to treatment

- Address existing barriers to treatment

- Schedule assessment

Dennis, Scott, Funk (2003)

Page 22: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

720630540450360270180900

1.0

.9

.8

.7

.6

.5

.4

.3

.2

.1

0.0

H1: RMC Clients will return to treatment sooner

Control (51% readmitted)

Days to Readmission

Percent to be R

eadmitted

OR: 1.34X2

(1)=6.8, p<.01

RMC(64% readmitted)

Median of 376 vs. 600 days, Wald=5.2,

p<.05

Median of 376 vs. 600 days

Dennis, Scott, Funk (2003).

Page 23: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

5. Treatment must last long enough to produce stable behavioral changes.

55

28

53

1915

9

54

24

0

20

40

60

80

100

Cocaine (Any Use)*

UA+ (Any Drug)*

Alcohol (Daily Use)*

Any Jail*

< 90 Days 90+ Days

Page 24: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

* p < .05 from Comparison

Aftercare MattersAftercare MattersAftercare MattersAftercare Matters

5

17

27

3529 28

55

69

0

20

40

60

80

100

No Tre

atm

ent

No Tre

atm

ent

CREST Dro

pouts

CREST Dro

pouts

CREST Com

plete

rs

CREST Com

plete

rs

CREST Com

plete

rs

CREST Com

plete

rs

+ Afte

rcar

e

+ Afte

rcar

e

*

*

**

*Drug-FreeDrug-Free Arrest-FreeArrest-Free

No Tre

atm

ent

No Tre

atm

ent

CREST Dro

pouts

CREST Dro

pouts

CREST Com

plete

rs

CREST Com

plete

rs

CREST Com

plete

rs

CREST Com

plete

rs

+ Afte

rcar

e

+ Afte

rcar

e

Martin, Butzin, Saum, & Inciardi (1999)

Delaware Correctional SystemDelaware Correctional System3 Years Post Work Release3 Years Post Work Release

7. Continuity of care is essential.

Page 25: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

Medications to Keep an Eye On

• Topiramate: alcohol, cocaine, nicotine

• Marinol+rimonabant: marijuana

• Depot naltrexone: opiate, alcohol

• Bupropion, Vigabatrin, Topiramate, Modafinil: methamphetamine

Page 26: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

11. Planning should include a focus on HIV/AIDS and other infections.

70 7465 62

26

11 1116 21

50

12 11 15 13 23

6 5 4 5 1

0%

20%

40%

60%

80%

100%

Population Lifetime Use Abuse/Depend.

Rec'd Tx IDUs w/ HIV-AIDS

White Black Hispanic Other

Page 27: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

Expanded HIV Testing Improves Survival Rates and is Cost Effective

Paltiel, 2006; Sanders, 2006

Page 28: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

Behavioral Treatments with Strong Scientific Support

• Medication Adherence

• Adolescent Treatments

• Cognitive-Behavioral Treatment

• Combined Pharmacotherapies and Behavioral Therapies

• Complementary and Alternative Treatments

• Community Reinforcement Approach

• Smoking Cessation

• Contingency Management Treatments

• Dialectical Behavioral Therapy

• Drug Counseling

• Family Treatments

• Group Behavior Therapy

• HIV Risk Reduction

• Motivational Interviewing/Enhancement

• Seeking Safety (PTSD)

• Work Therapy

Page 29: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

Modafinil Improves CBT Therapy Results in Cocaine Addiction

Dackis, et al., 2006

Page 30: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

A research infrastructure of 17 RRTCs & 150 CTPs across 34 States, and Puerto RicoA research infrastructure of 17 RRTCs & 150 CTPs across 34 States, and Puerto RicoA research infrastructure of 17 RRTCs & 150 CTPs across 34 States, and Puerto RicoA research infrastructure of 17 RRTCs & 150 CTPs across 34 States, and Puerto Rico

Oregon NodeOregon NodeOHSUOHSU

Washington NodeWashington NodeU. WashingtonU. Washington

Pacific NodePacific NodeUCLAUCLA

Florida NodeFlorida NodeU. MiamiU. Miami

Tri stateTri stateU. PittsburghU. PittsburghOhio Valley NodeOhio Valley Node

U. CincinnatiU. Cincinnati

South Carolina NodeSouth Carolina NodeMUSCMUSC

North Carolina NodeNorth Carolina NodeDukeDuke

California/Arizona NodeCalifornia/Arizona NodeUCSF/U. ArizonaUCSF/U. Arizona

Southwest NodeSouthwest NodeU. New MexicoU. New Mexico

Northern NE NodeNorthern NE NodeMcLean/HarvardMcLean/Harvard

California/Arizona NodeCalifornia/Arizona NodeUCSF/U. ArizonaUCSF/U. Arizona

Southwest NodeSouthwest NodeU. New MexicoU. New Mexico

Northern NE NodeNorthern NE NodeMcLean/HarvardMcLean/Harvard

New England NodeNew England NodeYaleYaleNew York NodeNew York Node

NYUNYULong Island NodeLong Island Node

NY State Psych. Inst.NY State Psych. Inst.

Delaware Valley NodeDelaware Valley NodeU. PennsylvaniaU. Pennsylvania

MidMid--Atlantic NodeAtlantic NodeJHU/MCVJHU/MCV

Texas NodeTexas NodeUT SouthwesternUT Southwestern

National Drug Abuse Treatment Clinical Trials Network

NATIONAL INSTITUTE

ON DRUG ABUSE

NATIONAL INSTITUTE

ON DRUG ABUSENIDNIDAA

Page 31: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

Drug Abuse Treatment Core Components and Drug Abuse Treatment Core Components and Comprehensive ServicesComprehensive Services

Child Care Services

Vocational Services

Mental Health Services

Medical Services

Educational Services

AIDS / HIV Risk Services

Family Services

Housing / Transportation

Services

Financial Services

Legal Services

Intake Processing / Assessment

Treatment Plan

Pharmacotherapy

Continuing Care

Self-Help (AA, NA) Meetings

Clinical & Case Management

Supportive Group and Individual Counseling

Substance Use & Urine Monitoring

Abstinence-Oriented Substance Abuse

Counseling

Motivational

Interviewing

Motivational

Incentives

Buprenorphine Detox

TELE

Page 32: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

New CTN Protocols

• Health consequences of buprenorphine/naloxone and methadone

• Prescription Opioid Addiction Treatment

• ADHD and Substance Use Disorders

• 12-Step Facilitation

Page 33: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

The Challenge of Implementation

Page 34: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

Are We Speaking the Same Language?

• Technology Transfer

• Research Diffusion

• Dissemination

• Adoption

• Replication

• Implementation

• Science to Services

• Blending

Page 35: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

A Conceptual Framework for Technology Transfer

Dissemination Adoption Implementation

Page 36: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

An evidence-based program is one thing….

Implementation of an evidence-based practice is a very different

thing.

Page 37: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

Bench Bedside Community

The Translation Bottleneck

Page 38: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

00 2020 4040 6060 8080 100100

Senile cataractBreast cancerPrenatal care

Low back painCAD

HypertensionCongestive heart failureCerebrovascular disease

COPDDepression

Orthopedic conditionsOsteoarthritis

Colorectal cancerAsthma

Benign prostatic hyperplasiaHyperlipidemia

Diabetes mellitusHeadache

UTICommunity-acquired pneumonia

STDsDyspepsia and peptic ulcer disease

Atrial fibrillationHip fracture

Alcohol dependence

Senile cataractBreast cancerPrenatal care

Low back painCAD

HypertensionCongestive heart failureCerebrovascular disease

COPDDepression

Orthopedic conditionsOsteoarthritis

Colorectal cancerAsthma

Benign prostatic hyperplasiaHyperlipidemia

Diabetes mellitusHeadache

UTICommunity-acquired pneumonia

STDsDyspepsia and peptic ulcer disease

Atrial fibrillationHip fracture

Alcohol dependence

Quality of Health Care Delivery Quality of Health Care Delivery

Source: McGlynn, E.A., NEJM, 348, pp. 2635-2645, June 26, 2003Source: McGlynn, E.A., NEJM, 348, pp. 2635-2645, June 26, 2003

Page 39: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

Adoption of Treatment Innovations

1.2%11.0%

25.6%

47.9%

29.7%

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

BuprenorphineNaltrexone

Nicotine Patch

MET

Incentives

Percentage Currently Using Innovations

Roman, et al., Treatment Innovations in Publicly Funded Substance Abuse Treatment Centers: A Preliminary Report from the Field: Presentation at CTN Steering Committee Meeting, 2002.

(N = 171 Administrators)

Page 40: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

• Off the shelf interventions often not readily accepted.

• May not work in real-life settings w/o modifications.

• Not enough attention to organizational/systems level issues.

• Plastic wrap on manuals often too tight to open.

Implementation Barriers

Page 41: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

Implementation research is still limited

Page 43: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

Diffusion Theory

Everett Rogers

Page 44: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

The QWERTY keyboard

Designed in 1873 to minimize jamming

Page 45: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

The Dvorak Keyboard (1932)

Quicker to learnMore efficient

Page 46: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

The “S” Curve

Time

% of Adoption

Early Adopters

Take-Off

Late AdoptersLarger farms

Higher incomesMore education

Source: Ryan & Gross (1943)

Page 47: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

Adopter Categorization

x x+sdx-sdx-2sd

Innovators=2.5%

Early Adopters=13.5%

Early Majority=34% Late Majority=2.5%

Laggards=16%

Source: Rogers (2003)

Page 48: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

Key Elements for Adoption of an Innovation

• Relative advantage

• Compatibility

• Complexity

• Trialability

• Observability

Page 49: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

“…the best candidate for rapid adoption would be an evidence-based treatment that

was simple, was similar with previous practice, had clear advantage, could be tried

out temporarily, and was readily observable.”

-Henggeler, Lee, & Burns (2002) Clinical Psychology-Science and Practice

Page 50: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

Early Technology Transfer Research at NIDA

• “Reviewing the Behavioral Science Knowledge Base on Technology Transfer”

• Monograph Number 155 (Backer, David, & Soucy, 1995)

Page 51: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

Bridging the Gap

• Community treatment providers should be more involved in research

• More effective dissemination and training strategies

• More knowledge needed about how technology transfer actually occurs

• Organizational and economic factors need to be considered

Institute of Medicine (1998)

Page 52: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

At the Louis de la Parte Florida Mental Health Institute

University of South Florida

http://nirn.fmhi.usf.edu

Page 53: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

Implementation:What Doesn’t Work

• Information dissemination alone (research literature, mailings, promulgation of practice guidelines)

• Training alone (<10% transferred)

Page 54: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

 

 OUTCOMES

TRAININGCOMPONENTS

KnowledgeSkill

DemonstrationUse in the Classroom

Theory and Discussion

 

10% 

5% 0%

+Demonstration in Training

30%20%

0%

+ Practice & Feedback in Training

60% 60% 5%

+Coaching in Classroom

95% 95% 95%  

Joyce and Showers, 2002

Training Components and Implementation

Page 55: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

Effective Intervention Practices

EffectiveImplementation Practices

Good Patient Outcomes

+

Formula for Successful Patient Outcomes

Page 56: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

Practitioner

Evidence-based Practices

Purveyor

Fidelity & OutcomeMeasures

Implementation Framework

Organizational Structures/Culture

Fixsen, Naoom, Blase, Friedman, & Wallace, 2005

?

PractitionerSystem of carePolicy makers

Page 57: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

• Exploration

• Installation

• Initial Implementation

• Full Implementation

• Innovation

• Sustainability

Fixsen, Naoom, Blase, Friedman, & Wallace, 2005

2 – 4 Years

Stages of Implementation

Page 58: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

ProgramProgramImprove-Improve-

mentment

ProgramProgramImprove-Improve-

mentment

Stages of TransferStages of TransferStages of TransferStages of Transfer1-Exposure1-Exposure ((TrainingTraining))

• LectureLecture• Self StudySelf Study• WorkshopWorkshop• ConsultantConsultant

1-Exposure1-Exposure ((TrainingTraining))

• LectureLecture• Self StudySelf Study• WorkshopWorkshop• ConsultantConsultant

TCU Program Change Model

ProgramProgramChangeChange

ProgramProgramChangeChange

Organizational DynamicsOrganizational Dynamics

Institutional & Institutional & Personal ReadinessPersonal Readiness

StaffStaffStaffStaff 2-Adoption2-Adoption(Leadership decision)(Leadership decision)2-Adoption2-Adoption(Leadership decision)(Leadership decision)

4-Practice4-Practice(Routine use)(Routine use)4-Practice4-Practice(Routine use)(Routine use)

3-Implementation3-Implementation(Exploratory use)(Exploratory use)3-Implementation3-Implementation(Exploratory use)(Exploratory use)

ResourcesResourcesResourcesResourcesMotivationMotivationMotivationMotivation

ClimateClimatefor Changefor Change

ClimateClimatefor Changefor Change

StaffStaffAttributesAttributes

StaffStaffAttributesAttributes

Source: Simpson (2002)

Page 59: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

A Comprehensive Framework for Research Implementation

ClinicalPractices

ProgramComponents

Systemic FactorsFinancial

Health CareInfrastructure

Legal/Regulatory

Education &Training

Research & KnowledgeTransfer

Org Structure& Culture

PatientEngagement

Staffing

Info &Clinical

Care Systems

Initial Services

Engage &Sustain

TherapeuticInterventions

Assessment

National Quality Forum (2005)

Page 60: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

Washington Circlewww.washingtoncircle.org

• A policy group on performance measurement for care of substance abuse dependence

• 4 domains of care

• 7 core performance measures

• 3 adopted by National Committee for Quality Assurance’s (NCQA) Health Plan Employer Data and Information Set (HEDIS)

Page 61: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

Domain Measure

Prevention/Education Educating patient about AOD disorders

Recognition *Identification rates

Treatment *Initiation of AOD plan services

Linkage of detox and services

*Treatment engagement

Interventions for family/significant others

Maintenance Maintenance of treatment effects

Washington Circle Performance Measures

* HEDIS measure

Page 62: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

Science to Services Activities Underway:

Research Opportunities

Page 63: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

Blending Teams:Linkages Between CTN and ATTC

Philadelphia

Portland

Los Angeles

Charleston

Miami

Cincinnati

Denver

CTN Sites

Seattle

Raleigh/Durham

ATTC

Puerto Rico ATTC

Long Island

Boston

San Francisco (CA/AZ Node)

New York City

Detroit

Albuquerque

Baltimore/Richmond

New Haven

Page 64: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

Training Rural Practitioners to Use Buprenorphine:Using The Change Book to Facilitate Technology Transfer

• 7 multi-disciplinary Oregon county teams convened using The Change Book model

• N = 51 (17 MD’s, 4 pharmacists, 2 nurses, 28 drug counselors)

• 1.5 day training

• Significant improvements in attitudes based on pre/post testing

• 8 months after training, 10 of 17 MDs received waivers to use buprenorphine

Source: McCarty et al (in press)

Page 65: Lost in Translation: Understanding and Confronting the Research to Practice Gap

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ON DRUG ABUSENATIONAL INSTITUTE

ON DRUG ABUSE

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