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From embedded interprofessional clinics to expanded alcohol-associated liver disease programs

  • Gerald Scott Winder
  • , Juan Pablo Arab
  • , Arpita Goswami Banerjee
  • , Kelly Bryce
  • , David C. Fipps
  • , Filza Hussain
  • , Gene Im
  • , Lesley Omary
  • , Arpan A. Patel
  • , Shivali Patel
  • , Susan Rubman
  • , Marina Serper
  • , Akhil Shenoy
  • , Joji Suzuki
  • , Paula Zimbrean
  • , Kimberly Brown
  • , Marwan Abouljoud
  • , Jessica L. Mellinger

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Hazardous alcohol use remains a major contributor to acute and chronic liver disease, while alcohol-associated liver disease (ALD) is a leading indication for liver transplantation. In recent years, embedded, interprofessional ALD clinics have improved access to alcohol use disorder care within hepatology and liver transplantation, but more work is needed to meet this challenge. The literature is lacking regarding scaling procedures to provide services for increasingly large ill patient populations. This article begins to fill this gap by describing “expanded ALD care”: broad, innovative, longitudinal, interprofessional care delivery strategies surpassing standalone clinics. Drawing from analogous patient populations served by collaborative models in primary care and comprehensive eating disorder treatment, the expanded ALD care framework proposes practical strategies toward specific innovations: equipoise between biomedical and psychosocial care elements, increased clinician number and reach, long-term patient relationships, harm reduction and palliative care, outreach to external agencies and clinicians, and enhanced support for patients and families. The article also defines attributes of innovative healthcare systems that support expanded ALD care.

Original languageEnglish
JournalLiver Transplantation
Volume31
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2025
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • alcohol-associated liver disease
  • integration
  • interprofessional
  • liver transplantation
  • multidisciplinary

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