Using Implementation Interventions and Peer Recovery Support to Improve Opioid Treatment Outcomes in Community Supervision
Project Number3U01DA050442-05S2
Former Number5U01DA050442-05
Contact PI/Project LeaderMARTIN, ROSEMARIE A Other PIs
Awardee OrganizationBROWN UNIVERSITY
Description
Abstract Text
Abstract
Individuals who have been previously incarcerated have a significantly higher risk of dying from overdose[4];
particularly in the first two weeks after release. More than 4.5 million people is the US are supervised in the
community setting and nearly half have a substance use disorder but few receive services. There is a critical
need for linkage to medication for opioid use disorder (MOUD) for individuals on community supervision.
Providing medication for opioid use disorder (MOUD) to individuals on probation or parole decreases the rate
of relapse and recidivism, and increases retention in substance abuse treatment. In 2016, RIDOC introduced
the first correctional system-wide MOUD program in the country to initiate a comprehensive program to offer all
three FDA approved medications (in all prison or jail settings) to all eligible individuals. As a result of the
RIDOC program, we have expanded MOUD linkage to treatment in the community that is associated
with a significant drop in statewide overdose deaths post-release. This work is the foundation from which
we have built the current proposal. Our proposed research is to rigorously test a systems-change approach for
increasing use of MOUD using a randomized type 1 hybrid implementation-effectiveness design in probation
and parole sites. We propose a unique network of 7 geographically distinct community supervision (probation
and parole) performance sites from Rhode Island, North Carolina, and Pennsylvania. After a 6-month period of
baseline for comparison, the Exploration, Preparation, Implementation, Sustainability framework is used to
guide system-change through facilitated local change teams consisting of justice and community service
providers. A core set of implementation strategies is provided to all sites. The overall objective is to improve
linkage to the continuum of evidence-based care for justice-involved individuals. Organizational assessments
are timed with EPIS stages. At the end of Implementation, N=680 probation/parolee clients will be randomly
assigned to receive peer support specialists vs. no peer support with follow-up at 3, 6 and 12 months.
Implementation outcomes include program acceptability, adoption, penetration, sustainability and costs. Client-
level effectiveness outcomes include retention, satisfaction, opioid use, opioid overdoses, recidivism, linkage to
OUD treatment, and utilization of recovery services. This research team is uniquely poised to evaluate the
implementation and impact of MOUD among justice-involved individuals, to answer questions of
urgent public health significance, inform implementation science, and improve service delivery.
Public Health Relevance Statement
Project Narrative
Targeting the intersection of justice and community-based care had substantial potential for addressing the
opioid crisis. The unprecedented public health opioid crisis among justice-involved individuals necessitates
rigorous and well-designed studies to inform interventions and implementation frameworks that produce
sustained public health impact. We propose a type 1 hybrid implementation-effectiveness trial targeting the
community supervision setting using 7 performance sites in Rhode Island, North Carolina, and Pennsylvania to
test probationer/parolee client engagement in MOUD.
NIH Spending Category
No NIH Spending Category available.
Project Terms
AddressAdoptionCaringClientCommunitiesCommunity ServicesCountryDropsEligibility DeterminationExploration, Preparation, Implementation, and SustainmentFDA approvedFoundationsGeographyImprisonmentIndividualInterventionJailJusticeNorth CarolinaOpioidOverdosePenetrationPennsylvaniaPersonsPharmaceutical PreparationsPrisonsProgram AcceptabilityPublic HealthRandomizedRecovery SupportRelapseResearchResearch DesignRhode IslandServicesSiteSpecialistSubstance Use DisorderSupervisionSystemTestingTreatment outcomeWorkcommunity based carecommunity settingcorrectional systemcosteffectiveness outcomeeffectiveness/implementation designeffectiveness/implementation trialevidence basefollow-uphigh riskimplementation evaluationimplementation frameworkimplementation interventionimplementation outcomesimplementation scienceimplementation strategyimprovedmedication for opioid use disorderopioid epidemicopioid overdoseopioid useoverdose deathparoleparoleepeer recoverypeer supportperformance siteprobationprobationerprogramsrecidivismrecovery servicessatisfactionservice deliveryservice providerssubstance abuse treatmentsustainability framework
No Sub Projects information available for 3U01DA050442-05S2
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