Title: Implementing Evidencebased Practices: What have we Learned
1Implementing Evidence-based Practices What have
we Learned?
- Richard A. Rawson, Ph.D.
- UCLA Integrated Substance Abuse Programs (ISAP)
- Los Angeles, California
- Principal Investigator, CSAT Pacific Southwest
Addiction Technology Transfer Center and Los
Angeles Practice Improvement Collaborative. - Co-Principal Investigator Pacific Node of the
NIDA Center for the Clinical Trials Network
2Strategies for Promoting Adoption of
Evidence-Based Practice Pre 2000
- Policy of Benign Neglect (Spiro Agnew, 1968).
- Build it and they will come (Shoeless Joe
Jackson, Field of Dreams, 1986). - A chicken in every pot a manual on every shelf
(Herbert Hoover, 1932 as modified by RR 2002).
3Top ten ways to make sure a treatment approach
does not get adopted.
- 10. Require expensive, specially educated/
licensed staff to deliver it. - 9. Make sure it involves using block grant money
in ways that are of questionable legality. - 8. Use medications that cost 10 per pill that
are not covered by insurance or Medicaid. - Credit and apologies to David Letterman, Kathy
Carroll and others
4Top ten ways to make sure a treatment approach
does not get adopted (cont)
- 7. Employ treatment manuals that have
- A. 400 pages.
- B. 300 words per page in 8 point font.
- C. No pictures, tables or illustrations.
- D. Language that requires a doctoral level of
education to understand. - E. Lots of abstract concepts and theoretical
principles. - F. No examples or short hand expressions to help
aid memory.
5Top ten ways to make sure a treatment approach
does not get adopted (cont)
- 6. Conduct a 3-day intensive training, with 8
hours per day of didactic lectures, a half hour
lunch and no breaks. OR - 6a. Conduct a one-hour overview, give them a
manual and let send them out as experts. - 6b.Give them 2 hours and call it a train the
trainers session. - 5. Use an approach requiring numerous individual
sessions in a program where caseloads are 50
patients or more. - 4. Create expectations that they will have a 100
success rate from day 1.
6Top ten ways to make sure a treatment approach
does not get adopted (cont)
- 3. Insist the treatment approach will work for
every patient regardless of ethnicity, gender,
age, drug type, etc. when it doesnt work, blame
the staff. - 2. Have a trainer who
- A. Uses no A/V support and reads long passages
from academic textbooks. - B. Reads his/her power point slides verbatim and
talks to the screen. - C. Has never been in a treatment program.
- E. Has the interpersonal charisma of a fence post.
7Number 1 way to to make sure a treatment approach
does not get adopted
8Lessons from Pharmacotherapy Development
- Naltrexone for Heroin Addiction
- A medication (naltrexone) that requires an
extended pre-induction detoxification period, is
expensive and has major patient compliance
problems is very minimally used. (Ling, Huber and
Rawson, 2000)
9Lessons from Pharmacotherapy Development
- LAAM for Heroin Addiction
- A medication (LAAM) that is only moderately
different from an accepted medication (methadone)
will not be used if there are substantial
regulatory obstacles, no clear clinical or
financial advantages and new procedures and
expertise are required (Rawson et al, 1998).
10Lessons from Pharmacotherapy Development
- Naltrexone for Alcoholism
- The treatment of alcoholism with naltrexone has
been found to have occurred in 44 of a sample of
private treatment centers. Adoption of
naltrexone was associated with patients referred
by managed care companies, centers who have
medically trained administrators, and centers who
have longer organizational histories. (Roman, et
al, 2002)
11Lessons from Pharmacotherapy Development
- Naltrexone for Alcoholism
- The use of naltrexone for alcoholism is very
minimal in California publicly-funded substance
abuse treatment programs. Use of naltrexone is
influenced by the cost of the medication, the
degree of physician involvement in the treatment
program and the amount of training on naltrexone
that had been done with the treatment staff. - (Rawson et al, In Preparation)
12Implementation of motivational interviewing using
a single workshop session
- The training in motivational interviewing
techniques using a single intensive workshop,
delivered by experienced trainers did not result
in the successful acquisition of motivational
interviewing skills. (Miller and Mount, 2001)
13Implementation of Motivational Interviewing using
Distance Learning Approach
- Extensive program of motivational interviewing
training conducted over a video-broadcast network
changes knowledge, but not clinical practice. - (Shafer, In preparation)
14Role of Clinical Trials in Moving Research to
Practice
- Clinical trial research is an essential activity
in establishing the efficacy of new treatment
approaches. - The demonstration of efficacy is one of the first
steps in establishing the empirical support for a
treatment approach.
15Role of Clinical Trials in Moving Research to
Practice
- The co-location of clinical trials research in
community treatment programs (NIDA CTN) is very
likely to increase the knowledge and acceptance
of addiction research by practioners in the
field. - The increased contact between researchers and
clinicians promoted by the CTN trials and related
activities is likely to increase research on
clinically relevant topics and promote the
adoption of research findings in community
settings
16Use of a Clinical Trial to Promote Practice Change
- Participation in a multi-site clinical trial of
the Matrix Model did not appear to promote the
use of this outpatient approach when assessed at
study end. - (Hamilton, under review)
17Limitations of Clinical Trials as methods of
Transferring Technology
- Clinical trial research protocol emphasizes data
collection rigor and rigid protocol compliance.
Often this is incompatible with flexibility
needed in clinical practice. - Participant (subject) inclusion/exclusion
criteria often excludes real world patients and
reduces generalizability to standard clinical
settings.
18Limitations of Clinical Trials as methods of
Transferring Technology
- Frequently, the clinical trial ends without
teaching clinical staff how to integrate method
into standard practice. - At the end of the trial there is often a long
period needed to complete follow up, analysis and
write up of results. Frequently the staff
involved in the trial are gone when results are
complete and made public.
19Lessons learned from the successful
implementation of methadone
- Problem with public concern about crime and
health issues. - Political leaders invested in finding a solution.
- Good data to support approach.
- Champion in position of power (Jaffe).
- Money invested to support implementation.
- Delivery system avoids reforming existing system.
- Local champions created.
20Implementing Evidence-based Practices What does
work?
- Implementation of the Job Seekers Workshop A
job seekers workshop, an employment preparation
program was not successfully implemented by
supplying treatment programs with the program
manual. There was significant evidence of the
program when the manual was accompanied by
on-site training and follow up sessions.
(Sorensen, et al. 1986)
21Implementing Evidence-based Practices What does
work?
- Training in cognitive-behavioral therapy
- Using a cognitive behavioral therapy training
program that required over 100 hours of didactic
training and ongoing clinical supervision, there
was a substantial adoption of CTB in community
treatment programs. (Morganstern et al. 2001)
22Implementing Evidence-based Practices What does
work?
- Contingency Management
- In a study to identify strategies to promote the
use of contingency management by counselors in a
methadone clinic, it was determined that feedback
to counselors and reinforcement for use of the
technique promoted adoption of CM. Feedback
about the value of the technique produced a major
increase in the use of the technique.
(Andrzejewski, et al. 2001
23Implementing Evidence-based Practices What does
work?
- LACES An implementation program of the ASI
- Pressure for accountability
- Involvement of community stakeholders and
providers in the design and implementation plan. - Involvement required by administrative agency to
receive funding. - Clear goal and regular data feedback to community
stakeholder group. - Initial cohort of trainees are voluntary to
establish procedures and work out challenges.
24Implementing Evidence-based Practices What does
work?
- LACES (cont)
- Employ software that is user friendly.
- Payoff for staff and organization is
computerized clinical reports that meet
requirements for accrediting agencies. - Training, technical assistance, more training and
more technical assistance, etc. - Report data regularly to providers.
- Establish practice as normative/necessary to
define adequate standard of care. - Patience and perseverance.
25Implementing Evidence-based Practices What does
work?
- Matrix Model Implementation in Thailand
- Serious identified problem (methamphetamine)
- No established, accepted treatments
- Major support from governmental and other opinion
leaders - Implementation conducted concurrently with
meaningful, relevant, targeted evaluation data
collection system. (Ling, Obert, Rawson et al, In
prep)
26Implementing Evidence-based Practices What does
work?
- Matrix Model Implementation in Thailand (cont)
- Elements of Training
- Key group of clinical leaders brought to Los
Angeles for 2 week extensive didactic and
experiential training experience. - Matrix manual, translated and culturally adapted
by Thai clinical leaders. - Program adaptations suggested to address common
clinical problems (engagement, retention,
behavioral compliance).
27Implementing Evidence-based Practices What does
work?
- Matrix Model Implementation in Thailand (cont)
- Elements of Training
- Involvement of clinical leaders in design of
training - Multiple follow up and booster sessions with
visits from US. - Successful sites given recognition and status as
training centers - Data from engagement and retention presented
publicly programs performing well receive praise
28Elements for Successful Implementation of
Evidence-based Practices
- Focus effort on few selected topics of critical
community need - Follow intensive training with ongoing follow up
sessions and clinical supervision - Make training/technical assistance readily
available, provide CEUs and certification for
training - Measure implementation of new procedures
- Incentivize application of new procedures
- Create community champions of procedure
29Elements for Successful Implementation of
Evidence-based Practices
- Training
- Engage target audience in choosing topic
- Trainers must be know key elements of treatment,
treatment environment, patient population and the
existing practices. - Engage target audience in selection and methods
of implementation. - Engage target audience in deciding parameters of
success and pay off for success.
30Elements for Successful Implementation of
Evidence-based Practices
- Training
- Training new procedures requires clear
presentation of method, with manual to guide. - Manual should be written and illustrated with
much how to information. - Training requires experiential component to
illustrate application (video tapes can be used
to augment, but not replace this element).
31Elements for Successful Implementation of
Evidence-based Practices
- Training
- Allow trainees to sit in on actual sessions if
possible. - Give feedback following initial training with
some form of knowledge-based proficiency test. - If possible, give trainees specific goal for
implementation, with specific parameters for
completion and measures of fidelity with a
timetable for supervision/follow-up.
32Elements for Successful Implementation of
Evidence-based Practices
- Training
- Supervision, follow up, problem solve, etc.
(audiotapes can be used). - Collect specific data from implementation and
feed back to staff and organizational leadership. - Positive reinforcement for technique adoption.
33Principles of Dissemination
- Adaptability
- Trial ability
- Relative Advantage
- Complexity
- Innovation
- (Rogers, 2000) as remembered by RR.