Since the declaration of a public health emergencies in Canada in 2016 and the United
States in 2017 in response to rising overdose deaths, more than 400,000 Americans and
38,000 Canadians have died from drug overdoses. Within Canada, British Columbia (BC)
shoulders a substantial burden of that loss, exceeding 13,000 overdose deaths since 2016.
BC's unpredictable and toxic drug supply combined with the province's siloed and
fragmented addiction treatment system are key contributors. The burden of disease,
however, is not restricted to criminalized substances. The prevalence of alcohol misuse
across Canada is at an unprecedented high, between 2015 - 2016 over 77,000
hospitalizations were attributed to alcohol related harms, with the highest rates again
being observed in BC. Further, the substance use crisis has had a disproportional impact
on Indigenous peoples as a consequence of colonialism and systemic racism. Accordingly,
the provincial government and representative health organizations have urgently called
for the development and implementation of a coordinated system of culturally safe
substance use care that spans a continuum, ranging from harm reduction services to
abstinence-based programming.
To address care gaps, Providence Health Care (PHC)-a regional health authority in the
province of BC - in collaboration with the provincial government's Ministry of Mental
Health and Addictions (MMHA), Vancouver Coastal Health (VCH) (another regional health
authority) - is spearheading the Road to Recovery (R2R) Initiative, a first-of-its-kind
model of substance use care. BC's existing substance use treatment system is comprised of
both publicly- and privately-funded service providers in bed-based and outpatient
settings. Quality and standards vary substantially between service providers, and
inter-organizational communication is extremely limited. The R2R model of care seeks to
address this by: (1) improving access to care through the creation of approximately 100
new substance use treatment beds; and (2) offering comprehensive substance use management
along the entire care continuum (i.e., harm reduction, withdrawal management, bed-based
recovery and outpatient longitudinal follow-up). A focus of the R2R model is inclusivity
and honouring what matters most to individual patients to foster a safe recovery
environment. Thus, close collaborations with Providence Health Care's Indigenous Wellness
and Reconciliation (IWR) team and the BC Centre on Substance Use Indigenous Initiatives
team has supported the integration of Indigenous cultural safety into the R2R model
including through workflows and daily programming thereby meeting patients where they are
at when they want and are in need of substance use care.
The proposed study will constitute a cohort of patients accessing substance use treatment
services parallel to the phased operationalization of R2R in the VCH region. In this
mixed-methods prospective cohort design, patients receiving R2R services will be observed
through primary data collection at baseline and 12-month follow up via (1)
interviewer-administered surveys and (2) semi-structured qualitative interviews over a
5-year study period. Participants will be asked to provide consent for the use of
personal identifiers (i.e., a unique and persistent identifier issued to all provincial
residents to access healthcare) to support secondary data-collection through (1) 30-day
prospective follow-up from time of R2R admission using electronic medical record chart
review, and (2) linkage annually to provincial health and administrative databases over a
five-year follow-up period. A purposive sample of cohort participants will also be
invited to participate in baseline and 12-month follow-up qualitative interviews.
Employing a convergent parallel design, quantitative and qualitative data collection will
occur in parallel, of which results are later compared and related to one another. This
will be an iterative process, as findings from each convergent analysis will inform
adaptations and additions to data collection processes across implementation phases of
R2R. The data will be leveraged to promote evidence-informed and coordinated substance
use care through the integration of population and administrative data From cohort
participant questionnaires, the investigators will gain an understanding of substance use
treatment trajectories, identify challenges and areas for growth in addiction health
services, characterize important features of patients accessing care, and improve our
provincial capacity to promptly tailor approaches to care in response to the substance
use crisis. Engaging with Indigenous participants for each study outcome will be critical
to understanding the impact of building Indigenous cultural safety into the R2R model on
relevant outcomes, and is supported by the IWR. Lastly, this work will support
surveillance of evolving substance use trends, identify fixed and modifiable risk factors
impacting substance use trajectories, as well build local, regional, and provincial
partnerships to promptly respond to health challenges associated with the dynamic
landscape of the substance use crisis. Collaboration with IWR throughout this work
ensures that the collection and use of Indigenous data respects and upholds the
principles of Indigenous data governance.