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Importance: The criterion-standard treatment for opioid use disorder (OUD) is medications for OUD (MOUD). However, less than a quarter of people with OUD receive MOUD. The collaborative care model (CCM) is an evidence-based practice that integrates mental and physical health treatment in primary care settings. Expanding CCM to include patients with OUD could improve MOUD initiation.
Objective: To compare the effectiveness of CCM for OUD and co-occurring mental health symptoms (intervention) with CCM for mental health symptoms only (active control).
Design, Setting, And Participants: This hybrid type 2a trial cluster-randomized 24 US primary care clinics to intervention or control. Participants included patients with OUD and mental health symptoms who were not receiving specialty mental health care or specialty substance use treatment. Study data were analyzed from February 2024 to January 2025.
Interventions: The control care team included primary care practitioners, care managers, and psychiatric consultants. Primary care practitioners prescribed psychotropic medications with psychiatric consultation. Care manager activities included patient education, engagement and self-management, shared decision-making, measurement-based care for mental health symptoms, and brief psychotherapy for mental health. The intervention had the same components as the control, with additional MOUD training and psychiatric consultation for primary care practitioners, measurement-based care for OUD, and brief psychotherapy for OUD.
Main Outcomes And Measures: Participants completed research assessments at baseline, 3 months, and 6 months. The multiple primary outcomes were past-month number of days of using opioids and the Veterans RAND 12 Mental Health Component Summary score.
Results: A total of 254 patients (mean [SD] age, 40.9 [12.4] years; 139 women [59.9%]) participated in the trial. Most participants (172 of 212 [81.1%]) were taking MOUD at baseline. Days using opioids decreased in both the control and intervention groups. The intervention significantly reduced opioid use more than the control with a medium effect size (adjusted ratio of odds ratio, 0.10; 95% CI, 0.03-0.38; Cohen d = -0.44; P < .001). Mental Health Component Summary scores improved slightly in both the control and intervention groups. The intervention did not significantly improve scores more than control (adjusted difference in change, -1.20; 95% CI, -4.97 to 2.57; Cohen d = -0.09; P = .53).
Conclusions And Relevance: Findings of this cluster randomized clinical trial indicate that OUD can be successfully managed in primary care with CCM, especially CCM for OUD and mental health symptoms. Primary care clinics with MOUD prescribers should consider implementing CCM for OUD and mental health.
Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT04600414.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2025.2126 | DOI Listing |
JAMA Pediatr
September 2025
Department of Pediatrics and Emergency Medicine, Children's National Hospital, George Washington University, Washington, DC.
Importance: Adolescents account for almost half of the 2.5 million diagnosed sexually transmitted infections in the US annually, and the emergency department functions as the primary source of health care for many adolescents. No recommendations exist for emergency department gonorrhea and chlamydia screening.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJAMA Netw Open
September 2025
Department of Social Epidemiology, Graduate School of Medicine and School of Public Health, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan.
Importance: Previous studies have suggested that social participation helps prevent depression among older adults. However, evidence is lacking about whether the preventive benefits vary among individuals and who would benefit most.
Objective: To examine the sociodemographic, behavioral, and health-related heterogeneity in the association between social participation and depressive symptoms among older adults and to identify the individual characteristics among older adults expected to benefit the most from social participation.
J Telemed Telecare
September 2025
School of Medicine, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, QLD, Australia.
In this case, we describe the remote telehealth leadership of emergent tube thoracostomy in a patient with a critical respiratory status. The patient had presented to a small rural health care facility with breathlessness and hypoxia despite supplemental oxygen. A subsequent chest x-ray revealed a large pneumothorax requiring emergent treatment to prevent respiratory demise.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF