2020
Barriers and Facilitators to Clinician Readiness to Provide Emergency Department–Initiated Buprenorphine
Hawk KF, D’Onofrio G, Chawarski MC, O’Connor P, Cowan E, Lyons MS, Richardson L, Rothman RE, Whiteside LK, Owens PH, Martel SH, Coupet E, Pantalon M, Curry L, Fiellin DA, Edelman EJ. Barriers and Facilitators to Clinician Readiness to Provide Emergency Department–Initiated Buprenorphine. JAMA Network Open 2020, 3: e204561. PMID: 32391893, PMCID: PMC7215257, DOI: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2020.4561.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsOpioid use disorderEmergency departmentAdvanced practice cliniciansED cliniciansClinicians' readinessOngoing treatmentTreatment of OUDEmergency Department-Initiated BuprenorphineUntreated opioid use disorderDrug Addiction Treatment ActDecrease opioid useVisual analog scaleHealth Services frameworkAcademic emergency departmentMixed-methods formative evaluationQuality of careSubset of participantsBuprenorphine initiationClinician typeOpioid useED patientsAnalog scaleOngoing careDepartmental protocolPractice clinicians
2008
Centers Speak Up: The Clinical Context for Health Information Technology in the Ambulatory Care Setting
Leu MG, Cheung M, Webster TR, Curry L, Bradley EH, Fifield J, Burstin H. Centers Speak Up: The Clinical Context for Health Information Technology in the Ambulatory Care Setting. Journal Of General Internal Medicine 2008, 23: 372-378. PMID: 18373132, PMCID: PMC2359517, DOI: 10.1007/s11606-007-0488-6.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsAmbulatory care settingsClinical contextHealth information technologyCare settingsHealth ITLarge primary care organizationHealth center networkCommunity health centersPrimary care organizationsHealth IT adoptionProvider educationMedication managementHealth centersPatient educationClinical practiceAudio-recorded interviewsDesignQualitative studyCare organizationsConstant comparative methodClinical tasksClinical domainsPractice efficiencySemi-structured interviewsObjectiveToBackgroundClinicians