Effective Risk Management Strategies in Outpatient Methadone Treatment: Clinical Guidelines and Liability Prevention Curriculum MODULE 3 The Relationship between Risk and Practice in the OTP
OTP Ideal Standard of Care From admission, each patient receives: Individualized clinical care Ongoing Documented Competent staff Good clinical judgment OTP clinical practice standards Incorporating best- and evidence-based practices * Adapted from CSAT Workshop on Risk Management
*Borrowed from CSAT Workshop*Borrowed from CSAT Workshop on Risk Management-2005 on Risk Management-2005 Document Communicate risks Review and correct Consider what’s “reasonable” and “foreseeable” Assess for impairment A ttend to RED flags
Informed Consent for OTPs Patients should understand: ▫Basic science of addiction ▫Methadone treatment Benefits Risks Alternatives
The Right Thing to do: Phased Informed Consent
Consents: A Valuable RM Tool Providing information via consents may increase and motivate patient involvement in treatment Phased informed consent ▫Helps share or “transfer” risk ▫Provides patient buy-in ▫Identify understanding and comprehension related to treatment
Patient is unknown and history may be unreliable Patient is unknown and history may be unreliable Patients’ responses to methadone may be variable Patients’ responses to methadone may be variable Patient may not adhere to treatment recommendations Patient may not adhere to treatment recommendations
Trends show impairment as an increasingly likely factor in more claims filed against OTPs
High Risk for Impairment During the induction process Drug-Drug interactions with methadone ▫Benzodiazepines ▫Alcohol ▫Cocaine ▫Other sedative-hypnotic medications ▫Muscle relaxants
Duty to take action Duty to warn
In Summary DON’T IGNORE Duty to warn Duty to make reasonable inquiry and assess Obtain Phased Informed Consent Document, document, document