Literature Collection

Collection Insights

10K+

References

9K+

Articles

1400+

Grey Literature

4500+

Opioids & SU

The Literature Collection contains over 10,000 references for published and grey literature on the integration of behavioral health and primary care. Learn More

Use the Search feature below to find references for your terms across the entire Literature Collection, or limit your searches by Authors, Keywords, or Titles and by Year, Type, or Topic. View your search results as displayed, or use the options to: Show more references per page; Sort references by Title or Date; and Refine your search criteria. Expand an individual reference to View Details. Full-text access to the literature may be available through a link to PubMed, a DOI, or a URL. References may also be exported for use in bibliographic software (e.g., EndNote, RefWorks, Zotero).

Year
Sort by
Order
Show
10858 Results
7301
Postpartum Opioid Prescribing in Patients with Opioid Use Prior to Birth
Type: Journal Article
Authors: A. F. Peahl, E. Keer, A. Hallway, B. Kenney, J. F. Waljee, C. Townsel
Year: 2023
Abstract:

OBJECTIVE:  This study aimed to describe opioid prescribing patterns for pregnant patients with a history of or active opioid use to inform postpartum pain management strategies. STUDY DESIGN:  We conducted a retrospective cohort analysis of all patients with a history of opioid use disorder (OUD) or chronic pain seen at a single outpatient clinic specializing in opioid use and OUD in pregnancy from January 2019 to August 2021. Patient characteristics, delivery outcomes, and opioid prescribing information were collected through electronic health record fields. We used descriptive statistics to characterize differences in receipt of an opioid prescription, prescription size, and receipt of a prescription refill across three patient groups: patients with OUD on medication, patients with OUD maintaining abstinence, and patients with chronic pain using opioids. In the study period, the institutional average rate of opioid prescribing after cesarean and vaginal birth were 80.0 and 2.8%, respectively. RESULTS:  Of the 69 patients included in this study, 46 (66.7%) had a history of OUD on medication, 14 (20.3%) had a history of OUD maintaining abstinence, and 9 (13.0%) had a history of chronic pain. Receipt of an opioid prescription after childbirth was more common after cesarean birth (12/23, 52.2%) than vaginal birth (3/46, 6.5%). Refills were common in patients who received an opioid proscription (cesarean: 5/12, 41.7%; vaginal: 1/3, 33.3%). CONCLUSION:  Compared with institutional averages, postpartum opioid prescribing rates for people with a history of OUD or chronic pain were 50 to 60% lower for cesarean birth and three times higher for vaginal birth. Future work is needed to balance opioid stewardship and harm reduction with adequate pain control in these high-risk populations. KEY POINTS: · Opioid prescribing rates for patients with OUD/chronic pain were 60% lower for cesarean birth than institutional averages.. · Opioid prescribing rates for patients with OUD/chronic pain were three times higher for vaginal birth than institutional averages.. · Refill rates following birth were high overall for cesarean (40%) and vaginal (33%) birth.. · More work is needed to balance opioid prescribing with adequate pain control in high-risk patients..

Topic(s):
Opioids & Substance Use See topic collection
,
Healthcare Disparities See topic collection
7302
Posts Tagged 'Partners in Integrated Health': Integrated Care Responses on Deck
Type: Web Resource
Authors: Arizona Department of Health Services
Year: 2013
Topic(s):
Grey Literature See topic collection
Disclaimer:

This grey literature reference is included in the Academy's Literature Collection in keeping with our mission to gather all sources of information on integration. Grey literature is comprised of materials that are not made available through traditional publishing avenues. Often, the information from unpublished resources can be limited and the risk of bias cannot be determined.

7303
Posttraumatic stress disorder and medication nonadherence in patients with uncontrolled hypertension
Type: Journal Article
Authors: Ian M. Kronish, Jenny J. Lin, Beth Ellen Cohen, Corrine I. Voils, Donald Edmondson
Year: 2014
Topic(s):
General Literature See topic collection
7304
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Assessment and Management
Type: Journal Article
Authors: Laurel Halloran
Year: 2012
Topic(s):
Education & Workforce See topic collection
7306
Posttraumatic stress disorder in opioid agonist therapy: a review
Type: Journal Article
Authors: Anthony H. Ecker, Natalie Hundt
Year: 2018
Topic(s):
Healthcare Disparities See topic collection
,
Opioids & Substance Use See topic collection
7307
Posttraumatic stress disorder in primary care. Part 1: Recognition and diagnosis
Type: Journal Article
Authors: W. A. Mosier, T. J. Schymanski, G. Z. Pickett, L. F. Mosier
Year: 2002
Publication Place: United States
Topic(s):
Medically Unexplained Symptoms See topic collection
7309
Posttraumatic stress disorder, depression, and suicide in veterans
Type: Journal Article
Authors: Leo Sher, Maria Dolores Braquehais, Miquel Casas
Year: 2012
Topic(s):
Healthcare Disparities See topic collection
7311
Potential economic impact of integrated medical-behavioral healthcare: Updated projections for 2017
Type: Report
Authors: Stephen P. Melek, Doug Norris, Jordan Paulus, Katie Matthews, Ally Weaver, Stoddard Davenport
Year: 2018
Topic(s):
Grey Literature See topic collection
,
Financing & Sustainability See topic collection
Disclaimer:

This grey literature reference is included in the Academy's Literature Collection in keeping with our mission to gather all sources of information on integration. Grey literature is comprised of materials that are not made available through traditional publishing avenues. Often, the information from unpublished resources can be limited and the risk of bias cannot be determined.

7312
Potential Effects of Digital Inequality on Treatment Seeking for Opioid Use Disorder
Type: Journal Article
Authors: R. Garett, S. D. Young
Year: 2023
Topic(s):
Opioids & Substance Use See topic collection
,
Healthcare Disparities See topic collection
7313
Potential effects of digital inequality on treatment seeking for opioid use disorder
Type: Journal Article
Authors: Renee Garett, Sean D. Young
Year: 2021
Topic(s):
Healthcare Disparities See topic collection
,
HIT & Telehealth See topic collection
,
Opioids & Substance Use See topic collection
7315
Potential for Medicaid Savings: A State and National Comparison of an Innovative Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome Treatment Model
Type: Journal Article
Authors: Lori Dickes, Julie Summey, Rachel Mayo, Jennifer Hudson, Windsor Westbrook Sherrill, Liwei Chen
Year: 2017
Publication Place: United States
Abstract:

In recent years, neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS) rates have increased rapidly across the United States, rising from 1.2 (2000) to 5.8 (2012) per 1000 hospital births annually. Because most NAS infants are treated in an intensive care setting, associated hospital charges are high and continue to escalate, rising on average from $39,400 in 2000 to $66,700 in 2012. An innovative NAS treatment program, which includes early-initiated methadone therapy, rooming-in, and combined inpatient/outpatient weaning in a low-acuity nursery, has been in place since 2003 at a large Southeastern hospital. The program has proven safe, effective and low cost for treating infants of >/=35 weeks gestational age whose mothers used long-acting opioids. Given that 81% of NAS cases in the United States are funded by Medicaid programs and that the cost burden is rising rapidly, researchers considered the potential saved charges associated with implementing the same program in other hospitals state- and nationwide. Researchers used regression models to project state and national NAS birth rates from 2015-2025 and to predict future NAS charges under current treatment protocols. Three scenarios were developed to compare the potential saved charges of implementing the innovative NAS treatment program across the state and nation with assumptions related to the percent of NAS infants eligible for the program, percent funded by Medicaid, and fluctuations in average length of stay. The potential saved charges are substantial, creating a compelling case for policy makers and hospitals in the pursuit of safe, effective, and cost-conscious NAS care.

Topic(s):
Financing & Sustainability See topic collection
,
Healthcare Disparities See topic collection
,
Opioids & Substance Use See topic collection
7316
Potential Usefulness of Apps and Other Digital Technologies for Improving Access to Behavioral Health in Primary Care
Type: Report
Authors: The Academy for Integrating Behavioral Health & Primary Care
Year: 2023
Publication Place: Rockville, MD
Topic(s):
Grey Literature See topic collection
,
HIT & Telehealth See topic collection
,
Healthcare Policy See topic collection
Disclaimer:

This grey literature reference is included in the Academy's Literature Collection in keeping with our mission to gather all sources of information on integration. Grey literature is comprised of materials that are not made available through traditional publishing avenues. Often, the information from unpublished resources can be limited and the risk of bias cannot be determined.

7317
Potentially Preventable Hospitalizations in Medicare Patients With Diabetes: A Comparison of Primary Care Provided by Nurse Practitioners Versus Physicians
Type: Journal Article
Authors: Y. F. Kuo, N. W. Chen, J. Baillargeon, M. A. Raji, J. S. Goodwin
Year: 2015
Publication Place: United States
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Few comparisons exist of the quality of primary care provided by nurse practitioners (NPs) versus physicians. METHODS: Patients with a diagnosis of diabetes in 2007-2010 (n=345,819) who received all primary care from NPs or from generalist physicians in a given year were selected from a national sample of Medicare beneficiaries. We compared the rate of potentially preventable hospitalizations among patients who received primary care from NPs versus generalist physicians. Various statistical methods-including multivariable analysis, inverse probability weighting of propensity score, nonpooling propensity score adjustment and matching, and instrumental variable (IV) analysis-were used to control for differences in patient characteristics between the 2 groups. RESULTS: Patients who received all of their primary care from NPs or from physicians differed by age, sex, race/ethnicity, socioeconomic status, residential area, and number of provider visits in the previous year. Nonpooling propensity score matching substantially reduced the differences, but neither IV approach satisfactorily reduced the differences. In multivariable analyses, receipt of primary care from an NP was associated with a decreased risk of hospitalization for potentially preventable conditions (OR: 0.90; 95% CI, 0.87-0.93). Similar results were found using conditional logistic regression models with propensity methods. We found smaller reductions in our analyses of "other hospitalizations" (OR: 0.96; 95% CI, 0.95-0.98). Both IV analyses showed associations between NP care and lower potentially preventable hospitalizations, but only 1 result was statistically significant. CONCLUSIONS: Using potentially preventable hospitalizations as a quality indicator, primary care provided by NPs was at least comparable with that provided by generalist physicians.
Topic(s):
Education & Workforce See topic collection
7318
Power in telephone-advice nursing
Type: Journal Article
Authors: V. Leppanen
Year: 2010
Publication Place: Australia
Abstract: Power is a central aspect of nursing, especially in telephone-advice nursing, where nurses assess callers' medical problems and decide what measures that need to be taken. This article presents a framework for understanding how power operates in social interaction between nurses and callers in telephone-advice nursing in primary care in Sweden. Power is analysed as the result of nurses and callers being oriented to five social structures that are relevant to their actions in this context, namely the organization of telephone-advice nursing, the social stock of medical knowledge, the professional division of labour between nurses and doctors, structures of social interaction and structures of emotions. While structural constraints govern some actions to a high degree, calls take place in an organizational free room that give nurses more leeway for acting more creatively. The discussion focuses on the introduction of new technologies of control, for instance computerized decision support systems and audio recording of calls, and on how they reduce the free room. Empirical data consist of 276 audio-recorded telephone calls to 13 nurses at six primary-care centres and of qualitative interviews with 18 nurses.
Topic(s):
HIT & Telehealth See topic collection
Reference Links:       
7320
Practical Applications of Implementing Integrated Mental Health Practices With Primary Care Providers
Type: Journal Article
Authors: Christopher Ervin, Sharon A. Rachel, LeThenia Joy Baker, Linu Joseph, Daniel Roberson, Folashade Omole
Year: 2023
Topic(s):
Healthcare Disparities See topic collection
,
Education & Workforce See topic collection