Primary Addiction Medicine Skills for Hospice and Palliative Medicine Physicians: A Modified Delphi Study
Hospice and palliative medicine (HPM) physicians frequently care for patients with substance use disorders (SUDs), but there is no consensus on which primary addiction medicine (AM) skills are essential. Identify key primary AM skills that physicians should acquire during an ACGME-accredited HPM fel...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of pain and symptom management 2021-10, Vol.62 (4), p.720-729 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Hospice and palliative medicine (HPM) physicians frequently care for patients with substance use disorders (SUDs), but there is no consensus on which primary addiction medicine (AM) skills are essential.
Identify key primary AM skills that physicians should acquire during an ACGME-accredited HPM fellowship program.
A modified Delphi study consisting of 18 experts on SUD in HPM and medical education. A literature review and expert input identified initial AM skills. In three Delphi rounds, participants rated each skill on a nine-point scale from “not at all important to include” to “crucial to include.” We calculated medians (IQRs), analyzed panelists’ comments, and grouped skills using the RAND / UCLA appropriateness method.
Among 62 proposed AM skills, 53 skills were rated as appropriate to include (38 of which achieved agreement), and nine skills were rated as uncertain. AM skills most relevant to HPM included 1) defining chemical coping, median 8.5 (IQR 2); 2) balancing life expectancy with risks of opioid use for patients with SUD, 9 (IQR 0); 3) explaining best practices to dispose unused opioids postmortem, 8 (IQR 2); 4) managing pain for hospice patients with SUD, 9 (IQR 0.75); and 5) partnering with hospice to manage patients on methadone and buprenorphine, 9 (IQR 2). Experts did not achieve consensus on whether HPM physicians should be encouraged to learn to prescribe buprenorphine for patients with opioid use disorder, 6 (IQR 3).
HPM fellowships should consider incorporating the primary AM skills identified in this study in their curricula. |
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ISSN: | 0885-3924 1873-6513 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2021.02.035 |