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Addiction Resource Center’s Experience

Addiction Resource Center’s Experience. Implementing Medication Assisted Treatment for Opiate Addiction The Business Case. April 2005. Addiction Resource Center’s position on the ever rising opiate addiction problems in Maine.

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Addiction Resource Center’s Experience

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  1. Addiction Resource Center’s Experience Implementing Medication Assisted Treatment for Opiate Addiction The Business Case

  2. April 2005 • Addiction Resource Center’s position on the ever rising opiate addiction problems in Maine. • “We do not know what we are going to do about the whole opiate thing.” • Our financial outlook was strained.

  3. November 2005NIATx • ARC receives a PI Grant from the Maine Office of Substance Abuse (OSA) • Objectives: • Learn Rapid Cycle Process Improvement. • Use these tools to decrease client wait times and increase client retention in treatment. • Report your data and share your experiences.

  4. STAR SIARC Business Case Wait Times Are Down 77% From Baseline

  5. STAR SIARC Business CaseIOP Volume Is Up 205% Over Baseline

  6. STAR SIARC Business CaseMedicaid Net is up 53% Over Baseline 3’rd Party and Private Net Is Up 50% Over Baseline

  7. A Model for Change • The RWJF and Maine OSA investment in Performance/Process Improvement has provided ARC three key assets which enable larger systems change: 1. Tools to manage change. 2. Experience being successful. (Access and Retention) 3. Institutional Credibility.

  8. November 2006 • We still had an opiate problem! • Needed to make a big change!

  9. November 2006 • Implement Medication Assisted Treatment (MAT) for opiate addiction. • Not with 20 consumers, but 400. • We needed a PLAN!

  10. Key Activities • Form team to work on needs, barriers, staffing model. • Complete draft of “Mission Fit” and “Business Case.” • Within Maine AR Group, borrow model from Aroostook Mental Health Center. • Present business plan to Hospital Administration.

  11. Community Response-Mission Fit • ARC took a 4 month snap shot to trend volumes of clients seeking treatment for opiate dependence. • On average 15-20 callers per month request Suboxone assisted treatment. • Of 15 assessments Dx. with opioid dependence in Jan. and Feb. 2007 • Five have admitted to treatment programs and are involved in MAT. • Those not admitted did not access MAT • Anticipated volume of new ARC clients per year is 100-150 clients

  12. Community Response-Mission Fit

  13. Community Response-Business Case • The 115 patients treated by programs in Westbrook equate to the current volume of ARC Intensive Outpatient Programs (IOP). • Absorbing this volume equates to an additional 2,300 IOP treatment days per year for ARC. • The funding mix from this population is: 34% private insurance 28% Medicaid 17% Medicare 16% Unfunded

  14. Capacity Planning • 20% attrition rate is factored for each change in level of care. Induction to Med. Management, during IOP treatment, and from IOP to Aftercare. • Based on national models for suboxone assisted treatment and three years experience at other Maine Hospital-Based programs. • Capacity exists for 832 Med. Management visits in first 18 months. • Based upon the data above, we expect to complete 532 Med. Management visits in first 18 months. • This 300 patient buffer exists to assure optimal pt. care and to avoid overwhelming resources.

  15. Community Response-Business Case (Cost)

  16. Community Response-Business Case (Revenue)

  17. Post ImplementationAccess/Increased Admissions • Access to Buprenorphine services has sustained a 20% increase in New Business.

  18. Post ImplementationAccess/Engagement • Admission Conversion rates for opioid addicted clients are up 60% over baseline.

  19. Post ImplementationRetention/Increased ContinuationCumulative Measure of active cases by month

  20. Post ImplementationPit Falls • Access for new bup. pts. is decreasing • Bottlenecks in maintenance apt. schedule begin drive access for new patients. • Deviation from practice standards to accommodate rapid pace • Work-arounds that compromise pt. and public safety.

  21. Business CaseMAT Groups • Increase induction access through use of MAT management groups

  22. Business CaseMAT Groups • Used PDCA cycles to pilot one group for 8 wks. • Better use of multidisciplinary team approach • Consistent application of standard of care • Replicate intervention with two 1.5 hour groups per week. • 2 groups per week takes 12 hours per month vs. 26.5 hours per month for MD to see same case load individually. • 2 groups per week absorbs 112 encounters per month. • Increase monthly average from 8 to 16 inductions. • Increase monthly average from 2 to 7 psychiatric evaluations. • Will result in increase revenues in the amount of $41,000.00 per year-NET.

  23. Access-Patients Drive ARC Continuum of Care Design

  24. Business Case-Room to Breathe • Greater self-reliance during times of social service cuts and legislative unpredictability. • In spite of flat funding, ARC has reduced the percentage it is underwritten by state dollars from 60% in SFY 06 to 42% in SFY 09.

  25. Key System Changes • Integrate suboxone services within ARC continuum of care. • Bring physicians on-site, single standard of care, improve communication, decrease staff load. • Working with recovery community to change attitudes. • Focus groups, presentations, well clients. • Maximize billing as the result of State/Payer change projects. • Work with the Maine formulary committee to reduce stigma and assure access to buprenorphine products.

  26.  Payer/Provider Partnerships • Support for rapid cycle change approach. • State wants to know barriers to MAT implementation. • Access • Flexibility • Advocacy and Credibility • Operational relief • Licensing regulations

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