Predictive Validity of Outpatient Follow-up After Detoxification as a Quality Measure.

J Addict Med

Center for Innovation to Implementation (Ci2i),Veterans Affairs Palo Alto Health Care System (EMS, SG, TB, LSE, TEP, JWF, KH, JT, MEV, AHSH); Center for Health Policy/Primary Care and Outcomes Research (CHP/PCOR), and the Department of Surgery, Stanford University (EMS, MEV, AHSH); and Program Evalu

Published: January 2018


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Article Abstract

Objectives: Care coordination for substance use disorder (SUD) treatment is a persistent challenge. Timely outpatient follow-up after detoxification from alcohol and opiates is associated with improved outcomes, leading some care systems to attempt to measure and incentivize this practice. This study evaluated the predictive validity of a 7-day outpatient follow-up after detoxification quality measure used by the Veterans Health Administration (VHA).

Methods: A national sample of patients who received detoxification from alcohol or opiates (N = 25,354) was identified in VHA administrative data. Propensity score-weighted mixed-effects regressions modeled associations between receiving an outpatient follow-up visit within 7 days of completing detoxification and patient outcomes, controlling for facility-level performance and clustering of patients within facilities.

Results: Baseline differences between patients who did (39.6%) and did not (60.4%) receive the follow-up visit were reduced or eliminated with propensity score weighting. Meeting the quality measure was associated with significantly more outpatient treatment for SUD (b = 1.07 visits) and other mental health conditions (b = 0.58 visits), and higher inpatient utilization for SUD (b = 0.75 admissions) and other mental health conditions (b = 0.76 admissions). Notably, meeting the quality measure was associated with 53.3% lower odds of 2-year mortality (P < 0.001 for all).

Conclusions: These findings support the predictive validity of 7-day follow-up after detoxification as a care coordination measure. Well-coordinated care may be associated with higher outpatient and inpatient utilization, and such engagement in care may be protective against mortality in people who receive detoxification from alcohol or opiates.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/ADM.0000000000000298DOI Listing

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