Structural barriers in the context of opiate substitution treatment in Germany--a survey among physicians in primary care

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Structural barriers in the context of opiate substitution treatment in Germany--a survey among physicians in primary care. / Schulte, Bernd; Schmidt, Christiane Sybille; Kuhnigk, Olaf; Schäfer, Ingo; Fischer, Benedikt; Wedemeyer, Heiner; Reimer, Jens.

In: SUBST ABUSE TREAT PR, Vol. 8, 01.01.2013, p. 26.

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@article{92fa653efca54c58993e8e12a4e0ae93,
title = "Structural barriers in the context of opiate substitution treatment in Germany--a survey among physicians in primary care",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Opiate substitution treatment (OST) is the most widely used treatment for opioid dependence in Germany with substantial long-term benefits for the patient and for society. Due to lessened restrictive admission criteria, the number of registered OST patients in Germany has increased continuously in the recent years, whereas the number of physicians providing OST has remained constant. Previous data already indicated a deteriorating situation in the availability or quality of OST delivered and that structural barriers impede physicians in actively providing OST. The present survey among a sample of primary care physicians in Germany aimed to identify and assess potential structural barriers for the provision of health care in the context of OST.METHODS: An anonymous written questionnaire was sent out to a sample of 2,332 physicians across Germany providing OST. Physicians contacted were identified through databases of the Federal State Chambers of Physicians and/or of the Federal Associations of Statutory Health Insurance Physicians. Data obtained were analysed descriptively.RESULTS: The response rate was 25.5% and the majority of 596 physicians sampled viewed substantial problems in terms of the regulatory framework of OST care in the German context. Furthermore, financial remuneration, insufficient qualification, as well as inadequate interdisciplinary cooperation in the treatment of comorbidities of opiate substituted patients were regarded as problematic. The number of physicians providing OST in Germany is expected to substantially decrease in the near future.CONCLUSION: Despite less restrictive admission criteria for OST in Germany, the legal regulation framework for OST is still a limiting factor through raising concerns on the provider and consumer side to be unable to adhere to the strict rules. To avoid future shortages in the provision of OST care on the system level in Germany, revisions to the legal framework seem to be necessary. In regards to adequate care for drug use-related infectious diseases and psychiatric comorbidities commonly found in opiate substituted patients, efforts are required to improve professional qualifications of physicians providing OST as well as respective interdisciplinary collaboration.",
keywords = "Data Collection, Germany, Health Services Accessibility, Health Services Needs and Demand, Humans, Opiate Substitution Treatment, Opioid-Related Disorders, Physicians, Primary Care, Questionnaires",
author = "Bernd Schulte and Schmidt, {Christiane Sybille} and Olaf Kuhnigk and Ingo Sch{\"a}fer and Benedikt Fischer and Heiner Wedemeyer and Jens Reimer",
year = "2013",
month = jan,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1186/1747-597X-8-26",
language = "English",
volume = "8",
pages = "26",
journal = "SUBST ABUSE TREAT PR",
issn = "1747-597X",
publisher = "BioMed Central Ltd.",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Structural barriers in the context of opiate substitution treatment in Germany--a survey among physicians in primary care

AU - Schulte, Bernd

AU - Schmidt, Christiane Sybille

AU - Kuhnigk, Olaf

AU - Schäfer, Ingo

AU - Fischer, Benedikt

AU - Wedemeyer, Heiner

AU - Reimer, Jens

PY - 2013/1/1

Y1 - 2013/1/1

N2 - BACKGROUND: Opiate substitution treatment (OST) is the most widely used treatment for opioid dependence in Germany with substantial long-term benefits for the patient and for society. Due to lessened restrictive admission criteria, the number of registered OST patients in Germany has increased continuously in the recent years, whereas the number of physicians providing OST has remained constant. Previous data already indicated a deteriorating situation in the availability or quality of OST delivered and that structural barriers impede physicians in actively providing OST. The present survey among a sample of primary care physicians in Germany aimed to identify and assess potential structural barriers for the provision of health care in the context of OST.METHODS: An anonymous written questionnaire was sent out to a sample of 2,332 physicians across Germany providing OST. Physicians contacted were identified through databases of the Federal State Chambers of Physicians and/or of the Federal Associations of Statutory Health Insurance Physicians. Data obtained were analysed descriptively.RESULTS: The response rate was 25.5% and the majority of 596 physicians sampled viewed substantial problems in terms of the regulatory framework of OST care in the German context. Furthermore, financial remuneration, insufficient qualification, as well as inadequate interdisciplinary cooperation in the treatment of comorbidities of opiate substituted patients were regarded as problematic. The number of physicians providing OST in Germany is expected to substantially decrease in the near future.CONCLUSION: Despite less restrictive admission criteria for OST in Germany, the legal regulation framework for OST is still a limiting factor through raising concerns on the provider and consumer side to be unable to adhere to the strict rules. To avoid future shortages in the provision of OST care on the system level in Germany, revisions to the legal framework seem to be necessary. In regards to adequate care for drug use-related infectious diseases and psychiatric comorbidities commonly found in opiate substituted patients, efforts are required to improve professional qualifications of physicians providing OST as well as respective interdisciplinary collaboration.

AB - BACKGROUND: Opiate substitution treatment (OST) is the most widely used treatment for opioid dependence in Germany with substantial long-term benefits for the patient and for society. Due to lessened restrictive admission criteria, the number of registered OST patients in Germany has increased continuously in the recent years, whereas the number of physicians providing OST has remained constant. Previous data already indicated a deteriorating situation in the availability or quality of OST delivered and that structural barriers impede physicians in actively providing OST. The present survey among a sample of primary care physicians in Germany aimed to identify and assess potential structural barriers for the provision of health care in the context of OST.METHODS: An anonymous written questionnaire was sent out to a sample of 2,332 physicians across Germany providing OST. Physicians contacted were identified through databases of the Federal State Chambers of Physicians and/or of the Federal Associations of Statutory Health Insurance Physicians. Data obtained were analysed descriptively.RESULTS: The response rate was 25.5% and the majority of 596 physicians sampled viewed substantial problems in terms of the regulatory framework of OST care in the German context. Furthermore, financial remuneration, insufficient qualification, as well as inadequate interdisciplinary cooperation in the treatment of comorbidities of opiate substituted patients were regarded as problematic. The number of physicians providing OST in Germany is expected to substantially decrease in the near future.CONCLUSION: Despite less restrictive admission criteria for OST in Germany, the legal regulation framework for OST is still a limiting factor through raising concerns on the provider and consumer side to be unable to adhere to the strict rules. To avoid future shortages in the provision of OST care on the system level in Germany, revisions to the legal framework seem to be necessary. In regards to adequate care for drug use-related infectious diseases and psychiatric comorbidities commonly found in opiate substituted patients, efforts are required to improve professional qualifications of physicians providing OST as well as respective interdisciplinary collaboration.

KW - Data Collection

KW - Germany

KW - Health Services Accessibility

KW - Health Services Needs and Demand

KW - Humans

KW - Opiate Substitution Treatment

KW - Opioid-Related Disorders

KW - Physicians, Primary Care

KW - Questionnaires

U2 - 10.1186/1747-597X-8-26

DO - 10.1186/1747-597X-8-26

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 23875627

VL - 8

SP - 26

JO - SUBST ABUSE TREAT PR

JF - SUBST ABUSE TREAT PR

SN - 1747-597X

ER -