Impact of COVID-19 on service delivery for an evidence-based behavioral treatment for families involved in the child welfare system,☆☆

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jsat.2021.108388Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • COVID-19 required rapid adaptations to community-based substance use services.

  • Clinicians delivered services on significantly more days per month during COVID-19.

  • Clients maintained consistent, frequent engagement with treatment during COVID-19.

  • Reimbursement per client significantly declined due to billable service limitations.

  • Virtual evidence-based practices can engage child welfare-involved parents.

Abstract

The novel coronavirus, COVID-19, has dramatically impacted clinical service delivery, particularly substance use treatment. The Families Actively Improving Relationships (FAIR) program is an action-oriented, evidence-based behavioral treatment for opioid and methamphetamine disorders in parents involved in the child welfare (CW) system. A seven-clinician team operates out of a Medicaid-funded clinic, primarily delivering services in the community. Attending to underlying mechanisms of FAIR's intervention strategies that promote client engagement and clinical outcomes, FAIR rapidly adapted procedures in response to COVID-19-onset disruptions. This study analyzed administrative records and Medicaid claims data from January 2019 to July 2020, including 157 clients and 17,449 claims. Analyses considered COVID-19 presence as March–July 2020. The study examined changes in the frequency and reimbursement volume of FAIR service delivery pre- and postonset of COVID-19. Although average monthly reimbursement per clinician did not significantly decline, reimbursement per client significantly declined by 31% (pre: $1005 [$732]; post: $698 [$546], p < .001). Clinicians delivered services on significantly more days per month during COVID-19 (mean (sd) = 16.73 (6.33); 20.26 (7.24), t(127) = −2.70, p < .01). Average clinician caseload size was stable, as was the average monthly service receipt days for clients. Thus, this study attributes reductions in reimbursement per client when FAIR provided services remotely to the elimination of in-person billable services and reductions in session length, but not in frequency. Medicaid-funded clinics and community-based substance use treatment interventions such as FAIR can successfully sustain and implement substance use treatment practices with deliberate, rapid adaptation to ensure that families receive needed supports in the face of contextual crises.

Abbreviations

CW
Child welfare
FAIR
Families actively improving relationships
EBP
Evidence-based practice
UA
Urinary analysis

Keywords

Opioid
Methamphetamine
Workforce adaptations
Community-based substance use services
Evidence-based practice
COVID-19

Cited by (0)

This research was supported by The National Institutes of Health through the NIH HEAL Initiative under award numbers 1UG3DA050193 and UH3DA050193.

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The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health or its NIH HEAL initiative.