Systems Analysis and Improvement to Optimize Opioid Use Disorder Care Quality and Continuity for Patients Exiting Jail
Part of paid clinical trials in Seattle, Washington.
- Sponsor
- University of Washington
- Study ID
- NCT06593353
- Status
- Recruiting
Conditions
- Opioid Use Disorder
- Opioid Use Disorders
Eligibility Criteria
- Sex
- ALL
- Age
- 18 Years - 110 Years
- Healthy Volunteers
- Accepted
Interventions
- Systems Analysis and Improvement Approach (SAIA) — OTHERSAIA an evidence-based, multi-prong, implementation strategy to improve systems thinking amongst frontline care teams to optimize care quality and continuity. The intervention includes monthly meetings where patient care cascades, process mapping and continuous quality improvement are used to identify bottlenecks and prioritize clinic based solutions.
Study Details
This study evaluates the effectiveness of a health systems strategy (the Systems Analysis and Improvement Approach - SAIA) that packages systems engineering tools (including cascade analysis, flow mapping, and continuous quality improvement) to optimize the management of opioid use disorder (MOUD) care cascade and improve linkages between jails and clinical referral sites. The investigators will 1. study the effectiveness of SAIA on MOUD care cascade quality and continuity for patients receiving care in jail and exiting to referral clinics 2. explore determinants of adoption, implementation, and sustainment of SAIA-MOUD across implementation clinics, and 3. estimate the cost and cost-effectiveness of SAIA-MOUD
Key Dates
- Start date
- Nov 21, 2024
- Status verified
- May 2026
- Primary completion
- Mar 31, 2028
- Completion
- Jun 30, 2028
Study Design
- Enrollment
- 4,186 participants (estimated)
- Allocation
- NON_RANDOMIZED
- Intervention model
- SINGLE_GROUP
- Primary purpose
- HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Arms
- Experimental: SAIA MOUD clinics in Jail Health ServicesMOUD clinics within Jail Health Services implementing the Systems Analysis and Improvement Approach (SAIA)
Primary Outcome Measure
Linkage to MOUD Care Upon Release from Jail [ Time Frame: 30 days ]
Central Contacts
- Sarah Odell Gimbel-Sherr206 291 4223
- Emily Callen5182572197
Locations (1)
| Facility | City | State | ZIP | Site coordinators |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| University of Washington | Seattle | Washington | 98104 | Emily Callen |
Find similar trials in Seattle, WA
Related Studies
- A Study Comparing Oral Buprenorphine and Injectable Buprenorphine for the Treatment of Opioid Use DisorderPHASE4 · Recruiting · VA Office of Research and Development · Tuscaloosa, Alabama
- Opioid and Pain Treatment in Indigenous Communities (OPTIC) TrialRecruiting · University of New Mexico · Arcata, California
- Overdose Recovery and Care Access (ORCA) Qualitative Stakeholder Interviews and County-level DataRecruiting · University of Washington · Seattle, Washington
- A Study of Brenipatide in Participants With Opioid Use DisorderPHASE2 · Recruiting · Eli Lilly and Company · Phoenix, Arizona