Clinical Decision Support (CDS) for Substance Abuse

General Details:

Name:
Clinical Decision Support (CDS) for Substance Abuse
Steward:
NIDA
Definition:
<p>This instrument, composed of validated initial screening and assessment questions, was developed by a panel of drug addiction, primary care and research experts in substance use disorders (SUD) to provide primary care providers with an actionable clinical decision support tool for the identification, brief intervention or referral for SUD therapy. The expert-panel consensus determined that after the patient is administered and has answered ‘yes’ to a one-item screener and completed the DAST-10, responses to a few additional questions were needed for clinical decision support to address (i) types of drugs used, (ii) frequency of use, (iii) report of injection drug administration and (iv) SUD treatment status. The crafting of this clinical decision support took into consideration available evidence and good clinical practice guidelines to develop algorithm-based clinical interventions, while further considering time constraints in primary care visits, clinic work-flow scenarios and the diverse range of clinic and referral resources among general medical settings. Field-testing and validation of this clinical decision support instrument and its common data elements content will be on-going, with efforts and review in primary care settings, the NIDA Clinical Trials Network and other federal agencies.</p> <p>The Clinical Decision Support (CDS) instrument was developed by B. Tai, et al, 2012, and validation studies are on-going. The instrument is available for use in the public domain; research was supported by the National Institute of Drug Abuse.</p>
Registration Status:
Qualified

Designations:

Designation:
Clinical Decision Support (CDS) for Substance Abuse
Tags:
Health

Designations:

Definition:
<p>This instrument, composed of validated initial screening and assessment questions, was developed by a panel of drug addiction, primary care and research experts in substance use disorders (SUD) to provide primary care providers with an actionable clinical decision support tool for the identification, brief intervention or referral for SUD therapy. The expert-panel consensus determined that after the patient is administered and has answered ‘yes’ to a one-item screener and completed the DAST-10, responses to a few additional questions were needed for clinical decision support to address (i) types of drugs used, (ii) frequency of use, (iii) report of injection drug administration and (iv) SUD treatment status. The crafting of this clinical decision support took into consideration available evidence and good clinical practice guidelines to develop algorithm-based clinical interventions, while further considering time constraints in primary care visits, clinic work-flow scenarios and the diverse range of clinic and referral resources among general medical settings. Field-testing and validation of this clinical decision support instrument and its common data elements content will be on-going, with efforts and review in primary care settings, the NIDA Clinical Trials Network and other federal agencies.</p> <p>The Clinical Decision Support (CDS) instrument was developed by B. Tai, et al, 2012, and validation studies are on-going. The instrument is available for use in the public domain; research was supported by the National Institute of Drug Abuse.</p>
Tags:
Health

Reference Documents:

ID:
ClinicalDecisionSupport_v1.0_2014May22.pdf
Title:
NIDA Clinical Trials Network - Clinical Decision Support
URI:
http://cde.drugabuse.gov/sites/nida_cde/files/ClinicalDecisionSupport_v1.0_2014May22.pdf
Provider Org:
NIDA
Language Code:
US
Document:
ID:
Title:
A Clinical Decision Support model for screening and management of substance use disorders in electronic health records in general medical settings (Abstract #663). Tai B, Lindblad R, Gore-Langton R, Ghitza U, Subramaniam G (2012).
URI:
Provider Org:
The College on Problems of Drug Dependence (CPDD), 74th Annual Meeting, Palm Springs, CA, June 2012
Language Code:
US
Document:

Properties:

Key:
CopyrightStarted
Value:
true

Identifiers:

Source:
NLM
Id:
7Jtf1aWwg
Version:
v1.0 2014May22