| Literature DB >> 32204713 |
N Maghsoudi1,2, K McDonald1, C Stefan3, D R Beriault4,5, K Mason6, L Barnaby7, J Altenberg6, R D MacDonald8,9, J Caldwell10, R Nisenbaum11,12, P Leece12,13,14, T M Watson15, K W Tupper16, L Kufner7, A I Scheim1,17, D Werb18,19,20.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The increasing incidence of fatal opioid overdose is a public health crisis in Canada. Given growing consensus that this crisis is related to the presence of highly potent opioid adulterants (e.g., fentanyl) in the unregulated drug supply, drug checking services (DCS) have emerged as part of a comprehensive approach to overdose prevention. In Canada's largest city, Toronto, a network of DCS launched in 2019 to prevent overdose and overdose-related risk behaviors. This network employs mass spectrometry technologies, with intake sites co-located with supervised consumption services (SCS) at three frontline harm reduction agencies. The protocol and rationale for assessing the impact of this multi-site DCS network in Toronto is described herein. The aims of this study are to (1) evaluate the impact of DCS access on changes in and factors influencing overdose and related risk behaviors, (2) investigate the perceived capacity of DCS to prevent overdose, and (3) identify composition (qualitative and quantitative) trends in Toronto's unregulated drug supply.Entities:
Keywords: Drug checking services; Drug market monitoring; Harm reduction; Overdose
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32204713 PMCID: PMC7092475 DOI: 10.1186/s12954-019-0336-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Harm Reduct J ISSN: 1477-7517
Measures, outcomes, and data sources
| Measures and outcomes | Data sources |
|---|---|
| Aim 1: Evaluate the impact of DCS access on changes in and factors influencing overdose and related risk behaviors | |
| Self-reported overdose among those that access DCS and those that do not | – Quantitative survey data (intake) – SCS client data |
| Proportion of participants reporting increase in protective behaviors (not using alone, carrying naloxone, use of SCS, consultation with staff, smaller/) “tester” dosage, discarding toxic substances) | – Quantitative survey data (intake/post-test) – SCS client data |
| Proportion of participants reporting they gained, intend to use, and/or used knowledge and skills | – Quantitative survey data (post-test) – Qualitative interviews |
| Aim 2: Investigate the perceived capacity of DCS to prevent overdose | |
| Characterize participant perceptions on the capacity of DCS to alter the risk of overdose | – Qualitative interviews |
| Identify participant perceptions of contexts, facilitators, and barriers to the use of DCS | – Qualitative interviews |
| Aim 3: Identify trends in the composition (qualitative and quantitative) of the unregulated drug supply in Toronto | |
| Number of analysis results detecting composition different from participant expectations | – Quantitative survey data (intake) – Drug sample analysis data |
| Increase in accuracy and timeliness of alerts in response to dangerous drug trends | – Drug sample analysis data – Qualitative interviews |
| Spatial association between frontline harm reduction agencies with DCS and fatal overdose, and changes over time | – First responder and coroner data (from OCC and TPaS) |