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Georgia: National Leader in Training an SBIRT Workforce J. Paul Seale, MD Family Physician Professor & Director of Research Dept. of Family Medicine Navicent Health/Mercer University Macon, GA, USA
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Healthy Habits Project 2002-3 Macon Family Medicine clinic Clinicians trained: 25 residents, 8 faculty and 2 physician assistants (now 108 residents after 13 years) Screened 3,041 patients, 241 (8%) positive screens, 115 (3.8%) received BIs Demonstrated SBIRT’s feasibility Seale, Shellenberger et al, Substance Abuse 2005; Seale, Shellenberger et al, BMC Family Practice 2005
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Project 2: GA-TX “Improving Brief Intervention” Project Timeline: 2005-2007 Aim: Replicate results of Healthy Habits Project in 8 residency programs (4 in GA, 4 in TX) Engaged “early adopter” faculty to serve as site coordinators: Rome (Floyd Medical Center), Atlanta (Morehouse Family Medicine), Albany (Phoebe Putney Family Medicine), Savannah (Memorial Family Medicine)
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Dissemination Results 189 residents & 6 faculty trained Broad geographic distribution across Georgia Shellenberger, Seale et al, Academic Medicine 2009; Seale, Velasquez et al, Substance Abuse 2012
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Project 3: Georgia BASICS State SBIRT Initiative 2008-2013 Aim: Implement alcohol/drug SBIRT in 2 largest hospital systems in GA Partnered with state health dept, Grady Health Systems, Emory & GA State U. Focused on SBIRT in emergency departments New: “specialist model” of SBI delivery $15 million over 5 years Johnson et al. Use of AUDIT-based measures, ACER 2013; Johnson et al. Integration of screening question… Annals of Emerg Med 2013
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SBIRT Grants by State, 2008 Missouri W. Virginia Georgia Medical School Residency Grants
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Project 4: Southeastern Consortium for Substance Abuse Training Rationale: limited SBI/substance abuse initiatives in the southeastern US Aim: Implement alcohol/drug SBIRT in primary care residencies GA/NC/SC Recruited 4 Family Medicine, 3 Internal Medicine residencies & PA program
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Dissemination Results 9 new clinics in 8 training programs, 434 residents & 200+ faculty trained in 3 states Added SBI training in new discipline: Physician Assistant training program Training, systems intervention & strong QI component led to increased SBI rates in clinics Pioneering work on coding & billing Seale, Johnson et al, Academic Medicine 2015; Le, Johnson et al, JGIM 2015
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Project 5: SECSAT for Advanced Practice Registered Nurses Rationale: as primary care delivery changes to serve more patients, nurse practitioners are in ideal role to do SBI and bill for services provided Engaged 6 GA advanced practice nursing programs (Mercer, Emory, UNG, Armstrong Atlantic, GCSU, South U.) Recruited 2 other “top ten” nursing programs—Johns Hopkins, UAB
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Dissemination Outcomes Training in 8 new nursing programs, 587 students, 74 faculty and preceptors trained in initial 2 years (goal: 900) Creation of online training materials for distance learners Very high level of interest, engagement and ownership of this important preventive practice Major efforts toward establishing national SBIRT training standards
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Newest Wave of SBIRT Trainees (63 new US grants) Augusta University Medical students, nurse practitioners, residents in Family Medicine and psychiatry, & psychology students Morehouse School of Medicine Training students in medicine, nursing and social work
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GA Workforce—Poised for SBIRT Dissemination 13 years of training projects >2,600 students/residents & 118 faculty in medicine, nursing and PA programs across Georgia & nearby states Follow-up interviews indicate these trainees use SBI after graduation Opportunities to accelerate use of this important preventive service by “turning on” and funding SBIRT codes
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Thanks! Questions? seale.paul@navicenthealth.org (478) 633-5910
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