HIV/AIDS-Related Health Services in Substance Abuse Treatment Programs Authors & Affiliations Lawrence S. Brown, Jr, MD, MPH, Steven Kritz, MD, Edmund J. Bini, MD, MPH, Ben Louie, BA, Jim Robinson, MEd, Donald Alderson, MS, John Rotrosen, MD Addiction Research and Treatment Corporation, Brooklyn, NY New York University School of Medicine / VA New York Harbor Healthcare System, New York, NY Nathan Kline Institute, Orangeburg, NY
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HIV/AIDS-Related Health Services in Substance Abuse Treatment Programs Authors & Affiliations Lawrence S. Brown, Jr, MD, MPH, Steven Kritz, MD, Edmund.
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HIV/AIDS-Related Health Services in Substance Abuse Treatment
Programs
Authors & Affiliations
Lawrence S. Brown, Jr, MD, MPH, Steven Kritz, MD, Edmund J. Bini, MD, MPH, Ben Louie, BA, Jim Robinson, MEd, Donald Alderson, MS, John Rotrosen, MD
Addiction Research and Treatment Corporation, Brooklyn, NY
New York University School of Medicine / VA New York Harbor Healthcare System, New York, NY
Nathan Kline Institute, Orangeburg, NY
Disclosures
There are no financial interests or other disclosures to report for any of the
authors involved in this project
Drug Abuse Treatment Clinical Trials Network17 Nodes with 116 Community Treatment Programs
Reaching into 26 States & DC
Philadelphia
Portland
Los Angeles
Charleston
Miami
Cincinnati
Denver
CTN Sites (2003-2005)
Seattle
Raleigh/Durham
Long Island
Boston
San Francisco
New York City
Detroit
Albuquerque
Baltimore/Richmond
New Haven
Study Sites• Northern New England Node: McLean Hospital, Belmont, MA• New England Node: Yale University, New Haven CT• New York Node: New York University, New York, NY• Long Island Node: NY State Psychiatric Institute, New York, NY• Delaware Valley Node: University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA• Mid-Atlantic Node: Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD
Medical College of Virginia, Richmond, VA• South Carolina Node: Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC• North Carolina Node: Duke University, Raleigh/Durham, NC• Florida Node: University of Miami, Coral Gables, FL• Great Lakes Node: Wayne State University, Detroit, MI• Ohio Valley Node: University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH• Rocky Mountain Node: University of CO Health Sciences Center, Denver, CO• Southwest Node: University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM• Pacific Region Node: University of California at Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA• California-Arizona Node: University of California at San Francisco, San Francisco, CA• Oregon Node: Oregon Health Sciences University, Portland, OR• Washington Node: University of Washington, Seattle, WA
Background
• HIV disease -- a major cause of morbidity & mortality, substantially associated with substance abuse.
• Substance abuse treatment – recommended to reduce substance abuse-related HIV infection.
• Little is known about how drug treatment programs reduce substance abuse-related HIV infection.
Objectives
To describe:
1. Characteristics of the substance abuse treatment programs
2. Characteristics of the patients served
3. Range of HIV-related services offered:• All patients• New admissions• HIV+ patients
Methods
• Study DesignCross sectional surveyDescriptive exploratory
• Study PopulationAdministrators at substance abuse treatment
programs within the NIDA Clinical Trials Network
Methods
• Data Source: Survey instrument
• Approved waiver of informed consent by Institutional Review Boards with jurisdiction over the participating treatment programs.
The Survey
Consisted of 112 questions divided into 8 sections:1. Structure and Service Setting (6)
2. Patient Characteristics (3)
3. Staff Characteristics (10)
4. Reimbursement Issues (24)
5. Practices (30)
6. Program Guidelines (8)
7. Barriers (27)
8. Opinions (4)
…more on the survey
• Drug treatment program administrators were advised to describe:Main clinical settingTypes of addiction servicesTypes of HIV-related services
• They also were asked about:Estimated HIV infection prevalence Risk behaviors
Results
• The data derives from surveys submitted by administrators from 269 (84%) of 319 treatment programs within the CTN located in 26 states & DC
• No portion of the country or the CTN was over-represented among the 50 non-responding programs
About the treatment programs
Approximately 80% of the treatment programs were private not-for-profit agencies
The program types were: 61%: free-standing facilities14%: hospitals, medical schools or universities 13%: co-located in mental health, family health or
child health centers12%: other types of healthcare facilities
…more about the treatment programs
• Most treatment programs offered two or more addiction treatment services
• 88% offered outreach and support services• 80% had other outpatient services: detox, intensive
outpatient, housing or aftercare • 55% offered inpatient detox or residential services• 37% provided outpatient pharmacotherapy
services, such as methadone
HIV-Related Treatment Services at Substance Abuse Treatment Programs
HIV-Related Treatment Services at Substance Abuse Treatment Programs
Mean Number of HIV-Related Treatment Services By Program and Patient Characteristics of Substance Abuse Treatment Programs
Mean Number of HIV-Related Treatment Services By Program and Patient Characteristics of Substance Abuse Treatment Programs
...And… THERE IS MORE DATA
Discussion
• The results of this study provide a plausible mechanism of how substance abuse treatment reduces HIV transmission via the availability of:HIV-related prevention servicesHIV-related medical services
• This provides the basis for: future hypothesis-testinghealth service studies examining the utilization,
effectiveness, and cost-effectiveness of HIV-related health services provided by substance abuse treatment programs
• This investigation highlighted four major findings:Rates for HIV-related education, behavioral risk
assessment and HIV testing are lower than authoritative guidelines
Hospital and university-based programs offered the most services
HIV-related services are higher in programs with higher HIV infection and risk behavior rates
A previous publication from this study showed that greater service availability can be achieved by drafting state guidelines and providing information on funding sources directly to the programs
Discussion
Limitations
• This investigation did not include information about the costs, effectiveness or utilization of HIV-related services or patient satisfaction
• It did not include data validating the information provided by treatment program administrators
• Lack of random selection may impact generalizablility of the findings
Conclusions
Given the public health significance of HIV disease and the role of substance
use in its transmission, further studies to examine the reasons for the wide variability of HIV-related service
availability are warranted
Acknowledgements
Research supported by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) as part of a Cooperative Agreement with the NIDA CTN (2U10DA013046). Its contents are solely the responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official views of the NIH or NIDA CTN
Other protocol team members are:
Randy Seewald MD, Frank McCorry PhD, Dennis McCarty PhD,
Donald Calsyn PhD, Leonard Handelsman MD, Steven Kipnis MD,
Al Hasson MSW, Karen Reese CAC-AD, Sherryl Baker PhD,
Cheryl Smith PhD, Shirley Irons, Kathlene Tracy PhD,