Recruitment

Recruitment Status
Recruiting
Estimated Enrollment
Same as current

Summary

Conditions
  • Opioid Use
  • Patient Safety
  • Pharmacies
Type
Interventional
Phase
Not Applicable
Design
Allocation: N/AIntervention Model: Single Group AssignmentIntervention Model Description: Stepped-wedge cluster randomized designMasking: None (Open Label)Primary Purpose: Health Services Research

Participation Requirements

Age
Between 18 years and 125 years
Gender
Both males and females

Description

The purpose of this study is to integrate two pharmacy-focused educational interventions designed to increase pharmacy based naloxone (PBN) dispensing and improve opioid safety. The intervention is comprised of two successful demonstration research projects (RESPOND, PI: Hartung; MOON, PI: Green), w...

The purpose of this study is to integrate two pharmacy-focused educational interventions designed to increase pharmacy based naloxone (PBN) dispensing and improve opioid safety. The intervention is comprised of two successful demonstration research projects (RESPOND, PI: Hartung; MOON, PI: Green), which include online and one-on-one educational outreach (i.e. academic detailing) demonstrated to provide knowledge and training for pharmacists to identify and effectively engage with patients who may be at high-risk for an opioid overdose. This study tests the combined interventions' effectiveness at improving opioid safety engagement and naloxone-related outcomes in community pharmacies. The following primary specific aims will drive this research: For Aim 1: The research team and study pharmacy partners will work collaboratively to integrate MOON and RESPOND into MOON+, including the creation of a website to host intervention components. Feedback from community partners and pharmacy professional associations will be sought to finalize the MOON+ content and materials. For Aim 2: We will conduct a stepped wedge, cluster randomized design in 160 pharmacies throughout Oregon, Washington, Massachusetts, and New Hampshire. Implementation will occur across five waves, each of which will include a baseline survey, toolkit orientation session, academic detailing, an online course, and access to printed onsite materials (algorithm, checklists, stickers, posters). The targeted population is pharmacists and pharmacy managers in CVS pharmacies (MA and NH) and Albertsons Companies (OR and WA) across the study states and who volunteer to participate in the educational intervention. We will recruit 40 pharmacies per state, 160 pharmacies total, providing a sample of approximately 450 pharmacist participants. Each store will have a pharmacy champion (a pharmacist or pharmacy manager), who will be the point of contact for the intervention. Only pharmacies with a consenting pharmacy champion will be eligible for the study; pharmacists at those sites may opt to participate. Data collection will occur at baseline, 6-, and 12-month follow-up, using surveys (pharmacist-level), store dispensing data and daily faxed counts of naloxone encounters (store-level). Note that no identifiable health information about the patients will be collected in these forms, only basic counts and communication descriptors. The follow up surveys for pharmacists consist of brief questionnaires about the training, attitudes and perceptions of naloxone and naloxone dispensing, sale of syringes over the counter, and dispensing of buprenorphine. For Aim 3: We will use a mixed methods approach to identify facilitators and barriers (e.g. state-specific policies, store policies, region) to intervention implementation and effectiveness. Methods will include an environmental scan of extant laws and policies, fidelity checking, pharmacist focus groups (n=50), and interviews with patients who have received or would be eligible for receiving naloxone (n=28).

Tracking Information

NCT #
NCT03545321
Collaborators
  • Comagine Health
  • Oregon Health and Science University
  • University of Rhode Island
  • University of Washington
  • National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)
Investigators
Principal Investigator: Traci C Green, PhD, MSc Brandeis University