Cost of start-up activities to implement a community-level opioid overdose reduction intervention in the HEALing Communities Study

ID Montoya, C Watson, A Aldridge, D Ryan, SM Murphy, B Amuchi, KE Mccollister, BR Schackman, JL Bush, D Speer, K Harlow, S Orme, GA Zarkin, M Castry, EE Seiber, JA Barocas, BP Linas, LE Starbird

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background Communities That HEAL (CTH) is a novel, data-driven community-engaged intervention designed to reduce opioid overdose deaths by increasing community engagement, adoption of an integrated set of evidence-based practices, and delivering a communications campaign across healthcare, behavioral-health, criminal-legal, and other community-based settings. The implementation of such a complex initiative requires up-front investments of time and other expenditures (ie, start-up costs). Despite the importance of these start-up costs in investment decisions to stakeholders, they are typically excluded from cost-effectiveness analyses. The objective of this study is to report a detailed analysis of CTH start-up costs pre-intervention implementation and to describe the relevance of these data for stakeholders to determine implementation feasibility. Methods This study is guided by the community perspective, reflecting the investments that a real-world community would need to incur to implement the CTH intervention. We adopted an activity-based costing approach, in which resources related to hiring, training, purchasing, and community dashboard creation were identified through macro-and micro-costing techniques from 34 communities with high rates of fatal opioid overdoses, across four states—Kentucky, Massachusetts, New York, and Ohio. Resources were identified and assigned a unit cost using administrative and semi-structured-interview data. All cost estimates were reported in 2019 dollars. Results State-level average and median start-up cost (representing 8–10 communities per state) were 268,657and 175,683, respectively. Hiring and training represented 40%, equipment and infrastructure costs represented 24%, and dashboard creation represented 36% of the total average start-up cost. Comparatively, hiring and training represented 49%, purchasing costs represented 18%, and dashboard creation represented 34% of the total median start-up cost. Conclusion We identified three distinct CTH hiring models that affected start-up costs: hospital-academic (Massachusetts), university-academic (Kentucky and Ohio), and community-leveraged (New York). Hiring, training, and purchasing start-up costs were lowest in New York due to existing local infrastructure. Community-based implementation similar to the New York model may have lower start-up costs due to leveraging of existing infrastructure, relationships, and support from local health departments.
Original languageAmerican English
Article number23
Number of pages9
JournalAddiction science & clinical practice
Volume19
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 2 2024

Keywords

  • Community engagement
  • Cost analysis
  • Intervention implementation
  • Opioid use disorder
  • Start-up cost

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