Co-Use of Opioid Medications and Alcohol Prevention Study (COAPS)

Overcoming Addiction

Overcoming Addiction

Overview

Co-use of alcohol and opioid medications is known to be a serious health/safety hazard, yet persists despite these negative ramifications. With limited information available within peer-reviewed literature, large-scale system and clinical research have demonstrated 24-38% of those with alcohol use disorders also have an opioid addiction, with rates of past 30-day opioid medication misuse among those seeking alcohol treatment as high as 68%. Our research has shown that among community pharmacy patients receiving opioid medications for pain management, approximately 20-30% are engaged in co-use of alcohol. Community pharmacy is a highly valuable but underutilized resource and setting for identification and intervention to address the US opioid epi-demic. We propose to adapt, manualize, and test the acceptability, feasibility, and preliminary efficacy of an alcohol-targeted Brief Intervention-Medication Therapy Management (ABI-MTM) intervention with community pharmacy patients. ABI-MTM will be a pharmacy-based medication management intervention, combined with Screening, Brief Intervention, and Referral to treatment that will target: (1) alcohol use elimination during opioid treatment OR (2) non-opioid pain management substitution (in consultation with the prescriber). We will conduct a small-scale trial in 3 community pharmacy locations wherein we will randomize patients with heavy alcohol use and with non-heavy alcohol use (1-to-1 ratio) to ABI-MTM (n=20) or standard medication counseling (SMC, n=20). Results will demonstrate intervention acceptability, feasibility, and preliminary efficacy. This study will also work to identify pharmacy system and practice-level barriers and facilitators for universal alcohol screening and intervention among opioid recipients. We will develop a mixed methods assessment guide to interview pharmacy technicians (N=20), pharmacists (N=20), and corporate leaders (N=20). Interviews will assess perceptions towards screening/intervention, internal organizational challenges, and processes related to ABI-MTM implementation for large-scale research and practice. Altogether, results of this study will provide critical insights, foundational data, and strategies for executing a powered trial and possible future system/practice-level implementation.

Website

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Contact Information

Alina Cernasev

Number of Counties

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Campus / Institute

UT Health Science Center

Department / Sponsor

University of Utah

Active Counties

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