Characteristics and Prescribing Patterns of Clinicians Waivered to Prescribe Buprenorphine for Opioid Use Disorder before and after Release of New Practice Guidelines

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Abstract

Importance: In April 2021, the US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) released practice guidelines exempting educational requirements to obtain a Drug Addiction Treatment Act (DATA) waiver to treat up to 30 patients with opioid use disorder with buprenorphine. Objective: To compare demographic and practice characteristics of clinicians who received traditional DATA waivers before and after release of the education-exempted HHS practice guidelines and those who were approved under the guidelines. Design, Setting, and Participants: This survey study was conducted electronically from February 1 to March 1, 2022. Eligible survey recipients were US clinicians who obtained an initial DATA waiver between April 2020 and November 2021. Exposure: DATA waiver approval pathway. Main Outcome and Measures: The outcomes were clinician demographic and practice characteristics, buprenorphine prescribing barriers, and strategies to treat patients with opioid use disorder, measured using χ2 tests and z tests to assess for differences among the waivered groups. Results: Of 23218 eligible clinicians, 4519 (19.5%) responded to the survey. This analysis was limited to 2736 respondents with a 30-patient limit at the time of survey administration who identified their DATA waiver approval pathway. Among these respondents, 1365 (49.9%; female, 831 [61.9%]; male, 512 [38.1%]) received their DATA waiver prior to the education-exempted practice guidelines (prior DATA waiver), 550 (20.1%; female, 343 [63.4%]; male, 198 [36.6%]) received their waiver after guidelines were released but met education requirements (concurrent DATA waiver), and 821 (30.0%; female, 396 [49.2%]; male, 409 [50.8%]) received the waiver under the education-exempted guidelines (practice guidelines). Among practice guidelines clinicians, 500 (60.9%) reported that traditional DATA waiver educational requirements were a reason for not previously obtaining a waiver. Demographic and practice characteristics differed by waiver approval type. Across all groups, a large minority had not prescribed buprenorphine since obtaining a waiver (prior DATA waiver, 483 [35.7%]; concurrent DATA waiver, 226 [41.2%]; practice guidelines, 359 [44.3%]; P

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Jones, C. M., Olsen, Y., Ali, M. M., Sherry, T. B., McAninch, J., Creedon, T., … Compton, W. (2023). Characteristics and Prescribing Patterns of Clinicians Waivered to Prescribe Buprenorphine for Opioid Use Disorder before and after Release of New Practice Guidelines. JAMA Health Forum, 4(7), E231982. https://doi.org/10.1001/jamahealthforum.2023.1982

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