Abstract
With opioid use at crisis levels, it is imperative to support youth ages with opioid use disorders (OUD) in taking medication and accessing behavioral services over long periods. This article presents a conceptual framework for telehealth strategies that can be adopted to increase family involvement across a four-stage continuum of youth OUD treatment and recovery: Treatment Preparation, Treatment Initiation, Treatment Stabilization, OUD Recovery. It first identifies provider-delivered tele-interventions that can enhance OUD services in each of the four stages, including family outreach, family engagement, family-focused intervention, and family-focused recovery maintenance. It then introduces several types of direct-to- family tele-supports that can be used to supplement provider-delivered interventions. These include both synchronous tele-supports (remote interactions that occur in real time) such as helplines, peer-to-peer coaching, and online support groups; and asynchronous tele-supports (communications that occur without participants being simultaneously present) such as automated text messaging, self-directed internet-based courses, and digital web support.
Journal of Marital and Family Therapy. 2021. doi: 10.1111/jmft.12499
Aaron Hogue, Ph. D
Senior Vice President, Research and Clinical Science / Family and Adolescent Clinical Technology and Science (FACTS)
Molly Bobek
Vice President, Family and Adolescent Clinical Technology and Science (FACTS)
Sharon Levy
Boston Children Hospital, Harvard Medical School
Craig E. Henderson
Sam Houston State University
Marc Fishman
Maryland Treatment Centers
Sara J. Becker
Center for Alcohol and Addictions Studies at Brown University School of Public Health
Sarah Dauber
Vice President, Research and Evaluation
Nicole Porter
Project Director for the PCORI-funded Primary Connections for Youth and Families [PCYF] clinical trial
Kevin Wenzel
Maryland Treatment Centers
Last Updated
November 2023