# Improving hospital-based care for patients with injection-drug related infections: provider perspectives

**Authors:** Giselle Appel, Kayla Hutchings, Cristina Chin, Alexis Vien, Matthew Scherer, Jonathan Avery, Shashi N. Kapadia

PMC · DOI: 10.1186/s13722-026-00651-9 · 2026-02-09

## TL;DR

This study explores how hospitals can better care for patients with drug-related infections by addressing provider perspectives and system barriers.

## Contribution

The study identifies actionable strategies and barriers to improving hospital care for people who inject drugs with infections.

## Key findings

- Healthcare providers emphasized the need for education, stigma reduction, and better communication around substance use disorders.
- Telemedicine and interdisciplinary communication were suggested to prevent care fragmentation and improve patient outcomes.
- Structural issues like funding gaps and policy constraints remain major obstacles to implementing effective care models.

## Abstract

Injection-related severe bacterial infections (SBIs), including skin and soft tissue infections, endocarditis, and osteomyelitis, are rising in prevalence in the United States and disproportionately affect people who inject drugs (PWID). Hospitalization for SBI presents a critical opportunity to engage patients in addiction and infectious disease care, yet healthcare systems often fail to capitalize on this moment.

This qualitative study explores the perspectives of 22 clinical stakeholders, including physicians, surgeons, nurses, and social workers, on barriers and strategies to improve care for hospitalized people who inject drugs (PWID) with substance use disorders (SUDs). Participants were recruited through purposive sampling from a large urban healthcare institution and selected external sites. Semi-structured interviews were conducted and analyzed using a thematic analysis approach.

Three core themes emerged: empowering clinical teams, enhancing patient care, and improving interdisciplinary workflows. Participants called for stronger provider education on substance use disorders, stigma reduction, and communication; expanded access to addiction consults, harm reduction tools, peer navigators, and flexible discharge options such as OPAT with coordinated follow-up. Barriers included limited staffing, inconsistent access to addiction specialists and peers, and institutional inertia around discharge and reimbursement. Stakeholders highlighted telemedicine and structured interdisciplinary communication as means to prevent care fragmentation, noting that patient-directed discharges often stem from unmanaged withdrawal, stigma, and mistrust within existing hospital systems.

Our findings align with prior research on addiction consult models and highlight emerging support for hybrid care delivery models that integrate harm reduction, peer support, and telehealth. However, practical and structural limitations, such as policy constraints, funding gaps, and misaligned institutional incentives, remain significant obstacles. This study contributes to a growing body of literature calling for targeted, feasible interventions that can transform hospital-based care for PWID with SBIs. Future work should address patient perspectives and evaluate outcomes of proposed strategies to guide institutional investment and policy reform.

The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s13722-026-00651-9.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** endocarditis (MONDO:0005025), osteomyelitis (MONDO:0005246)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** infections (MESH:D007239)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12896020