Bringing chronic-pain care to rural veterans: A telehealth pilot program description.

Author: Glynn LH1, Chen JA1, Dawson TC1, Gelman H2, Zeliadt SB2
Affiliation:
1Veterans Affairs Puget Sound Health Care System.
2Denver-Seattle Center of Innovation (COIN) for Veteran-Centered Value-Driven Care.
Conference/Journal: Psychol Serv.
Date published: 2020 Jan 16
Other: Special Notes: doi: 10.1037/ser0000408. [Epub ahead of print] , Word Count: 177


Opioid-related harms disproportionately affect rural communities. Recent research-based policy changes have called for reductions in opioid prescribing and substitution of safe and effective alternatives to opioids for treating chronic pain, but such alternatives are often difficult to access in rural areas. Telehealth services can help address this disparity by bringing evidence-based, biopsychosocial chronic-pain services to rural and underserved patients with chronic pain. This article describes a 2-year pilot project for delivering chronic-pain care by pain specialists from central hubs at Veterans Health Administration (VA) medical centers to spokes at VA community-based outpatient clinics (CBOCs). The VA Puget Sound Pain Telehealth pilot program offered pain education classes, cognitive-behavioral therapy groups, opioid-safety education, and acupuncture education. The program delivered 501 encounters to patients from 1 hub to 4 CBOC spoke sites from 2016 to 2018, and supported training, administration, equipment acquisition, and grant-writing. The quality-improvement project was rolled out using existing local resources. We present initial findings about the patients who utilized Pain Telehealth, share lessons learned, and discuss future directions for expansion. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).

PMID: 31944817 DOI: 10.1037/ser0000408

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