Optimizing Care for People with Opioid Use Disorder and Mental Health Conditions

Overview 

The Research Need 

Among the millions of people with opioid use disorder, 27% have a serious mental illness, 64% have any mental illness, and approximately 11% to 26% have alcohol use disorder or another substance use disorder. Among those whose deaths are associated with opioid overdose (more than 80,000 in 2018 alone), up to 30% may be due to suicide, and nonfatal overdoses involving opioids are also associated with elevated suicide risk. Despite this clinical need for people with co-occurring opioid use disorder and mental health conditions and/or suicide risk, access to evidence-based treatments remains low.   

About the Program 

This program supports innovative research to develop, optimize, and test approaches to improve delivery of treatments and services for people with co-occurring opioid use disorder, mental illness, and/or suicide risk. To expand the reach of effective strategies, this research addresses access, continuity, quality, equity, efficiency, value, and clinical outcomes of care. 

The program will leverage strong, interdisciplinary research-practice partnerships to diagnose and treat opioid use disorder and mental illness. Because many individuals who access mental health care quickly fall out of care and/or do not receive guideline-concordant treatment, this research will develop screening methods to identify people with co-occurring conditions and assess the cost, effectiveness, and sustainability of interventions and services in rural and urban settings and in areas with a shortage of health professionals. 

This research will also test the relative contributions of various care components for overall effectiveness in individuals with opioid use disorder and mental illness, toward optimizing multi-component service delivery interventions. 

Open Funding Opportunities

There are no Open Funding Opportunities at this time.

Program Details

To date, through the Helping to End Addiction Long-term® Initiative, or NIH HEAL Initiative®, NIH has funded four cooperative agreements, one research project grant, and nine supplemental awards to improve the treatment and management of services for people with opioid use disorder and co-occurring mental health conditions and/or suicide risk, totaling $63.8 million.

Each awardee is utilizing clinical trial and other high-impact designs to evaluate not only clinical outcomes but also outcomes related to access to care and continuity of care. Awardees are also conducting economic analyses to investigate how to make their treatments and services financially feasible in clinical practices once the research concludes.

VIDEO: Stigma Prevents Better Pain Management and Addiction Treatment

Joshua Gordon, MD, PhD, Director of the National Institute of Mental Health, discusses how researchers are considering stigma when planning ways to address the opioid crisis.

Research Examples

Research examples supported by this program include: 

  • Using pragmatic and optimization designs to test deployment-focused interventions in existing clinical practice settings in high-need locations 
  • Serving diverse patient populations, including racial and ethnic minorities, pregnant women, and participants younger than 18 years of age 
  • Answering research questions about cost and cost-effectiveness  
  • Streamlining workflows through routine screening and efficient referral pathways to medication-based treatment for opioid use disorder and mental illness 
  • Identifying high-value components of the collaborative care model and other multi-component service delivery interventions for use in patients with co-occurring mental illness and opioid use disorder 
  • Building new service-delivery models for people with opioid use disorder and co-occurring mental health problems and/or suicide risk

  • Brandeis University – Massachusetts  
  • Hennepin Healthcare Research Institute – Minnesota  
  • Henry Ford Health System – Michigan  
  • Kaiser Foundation Research Institute – California 
  • Rand Corporation – California 
  • The Ohio State University – Ohio 
  • University of Connecticut School of Medicine – Connecticut  
  • University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worchester – Massachusetts  
  • University of Michigan – Michigan  
  • University of Pennsylvania – Pennsylvania 
  • University of Washington – Washington

2024
Improving Access and Treatment for Co-occurring Opioid Use Disorders and Mental Illness
Nov 05, 2024
2024
Patient-centered team-based primary care to Treat Opioid Use Disorder, Depression, and Other conditions
Nov 05, 2024
2024
The Whole Health Study: Collaborative Care for OUD and Mental Health Conditions
Nov 05, 2024
2023
Improving Buprenorphine Retention with Transcutaneous Auricular Neurostimulation for Patients with Co-occurring Posttraumatic Stress Disorder and Opioid Use Disorder
Nov 28, 2023
2023
Autonomous Digital CBT Intervention for Opioid Use Disorder in Individuals with Co-Occurring Internalizing Disorders
Nov 28, 2023