| Literature DB >> 33118145 |
Andrew Ivsins1,2, Jade Boyd1,2, Samara Mayer1, Alexandra Collins3, Christy Sutherland1,4, Thomas Kerr1,2, Ryan McNeil5,6,7,8.
Abstract
North America is experiencing an overdose crisis driven by fentanyl, related analogues, and fentanyl-adulterated drugs. In response, there have been increased calls for "safe supply" interventions based on the premise that providing a safer alternative (i.e., pharmaceutical drugs of known quality/quantity, non-adulterated, with user agency in consumption methods) to the street drug supply will limit people's use of fentanyl-adulterated drugs and reduce overdose events. This study examined outcomes of a hydromorphone tablet distribution program intended to prevent overdose events among people who use drugs (PWUD) at high risk of fatal overdose. Semi-structured qualitative interviews were conducted with 42 people enrolled in the hydromorphone distribution program. Additionally, over 100 h of ethnographic observation were undertaken in and around the study site. Transcripts were coded using NVivo and based on categories extracted from the interview guides and those identified during initial interviews and ethnographic fieldwork. Analysis focused on narratives around experiences with the program, focusing on program-related outcomes. Our analysis identified the following positive outcomes of being enrolled in the hydromorphone tablet distribution program: (1) reduced street drug use and overdose risk, (2) improvements to health and well-being, (3) improvements in co-management of pain, and (4) economic improvements. Our findings indicate that the hydromorphone distribution program not only is effective in responding to the current overdose crisis by reducing people's use of illicit drugs but also addresses inequities stemming from the intersection of drug use and social inequality. Safe supply programs should be further implemented and evaluated in both urban and rural setting across North America as a strategy to reduce exposure to the toxic drug supply and fatal overdose.Entities:
Keywords: Fentanyl; Overdose; Qualitative research; Safe supply
Year: 2020 PMID: 33118145 PMCID: PMC7592642 DOI: 10.1007/s11524-020-00489-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Urban Health ISSN: 1099-3460 Impact factor: 3.671
Participant demographics
| Age: median (range) | 44 (26–72) | |
| Gender | Women | 10 |
| Men | 32 | |
| Ethnicity | Indigenous | 8 |
| White | 33 | |
| Other | 1 | |
| Housing | Apartment | 10 |
| Single room accommodation | 18 | |
| Shelter | 5 | |
| Unhoused/outside | 9 | |
| Income generation (past 30 days) | Full-time work | 5 |
| Part-time work | 6 | |
| Drug selling | 12 | |
| Sex work | 1 | |
| Recycling/binning | 17 | |
| Panhandling | 17 | |
| Reselling goods | 24 | |
| Social assistance | 39 | |
| Drug use (past 30 days) | Cocaine (powder) | 10 |
| Crack | 7 | |
| Heroin | 30 | |
| Fentanyl | 38 | |
| Other opiates | 27 | |
| Crystal meth | 32 | |
| Marijuana | 15 | |
| “Goofballs” (heroin and meth combined) | 33 | |
| Number of overdoses (past year before program enrollment) | 0 | 22 |
| 1 | 7 | |
| 2 | 5 | |
| 3 or more | 8 |
Participant quotations
| Reduced street drug use and overdose risk | |
| 1. Now I’m on this Dilaudid program…it’s changing my drug use a lot, actually. Like I went from using [fentanyl] five to ten times a day to using once a day. So, in the last month, I’ve gone down to like just once a day, twice a day. And that’s - it’s good. (Participant 13, 47-year-old white man) | |
| 2. I’m using way less. I’m using way less of street drugs, meth and whatever, fentanyl, or yeah I’m using way less. Significantly less. Yeah, I’m still using but now down 75, 80 percent, easy, yeah. (Participant 28, 58-year-old white man) | |
| 3. You know, you are not using street drugs that have, god knows what in it. You know, fucking benzos [benzodiazepines] and this and that. [You] find all kinds of weird shit in there. (Participant 23, 48-year-old white man) | |
| Improvements to health and well-being | |
| 4. I was remarking to a couple of people that two of the last three days I’ve actually managed to eat like entire meals, you know, and so even those little, little things are kind of gifts of the program really because you know if I did not have access to medications that day I would have been out hustling or boosting [stealing] or bullshitting for the dope. So you never get time to eat. (Participant 28, 58-year-old white man) | |
| 5. Well, I suppose I could say yes because I’m not using as many…using needles as many times as I was in the past throughout the day. (Participant 20, 43-year-old Indigenous man) | |
| Improvements in co-management of pain | |
| 6. Well if you inject it you feel it like, you know, faster. And if you swallow of course it takes a long time to dissolve, so… but the pain is not as much. I can like walk more and do more stuff. (Participant 3, 66-year-old white man) | |
| 7. I was doing the injections but now I’m doing the oral, which is two pills I get of Dilaudid, and it helps me with pain…the last time I was in the hospital I got some oral Dilaudid, and I liked it. It helped a lot, so I was so looking forward to it. I thought I’d like the injections, but it turns out I do like the oral better. (Participant 34, 58-year-old white woman) | |
| Economic improvements | |
| 8. Like say six months ago the 30 bucks I’m getting for doing this [interview], I would have spent that on drugs. Tonight, if I get 30 dollars, I’m going to go to McDonald’s and I’m going to go buy myself something…I’m not going to buy drugs with the money, I’ll tell you that. Six months ago I would have, though, right? That’s the first thing I would have been thinking…Now I know tonight I’m not going to be, because I’m going to go over to the window and get my drugs, and then I can go spend my money on me. (Participant 13, 47-year-old white man) | |
| 9. When I used to run out of money I would do crime, right. So that’s stopped. I’m not running out of money because this [hydromorphone] is free, right. That’s a big bonus for me. I do not have to decide between eating and doing dope, right. I can do my dope here and then go eat, right. It’s working fine. (Participant 39, 43-year-old South Asian man) | |
| 10. Like I told you, this is the first time that I had money in years in my pocket. Like two weeks after [social assistance] cheque day, normally I’d be broke and I’d already be cuffing [trying to get for free] Dilaudid on the street. I’d hit somebody up and say hey, you know, I’m hurting. I’m sick and could you help me to cuff me a Dilaudid till payday and I’d be already in debt, owe people money. Because I’ve got good credit because I’m really good at paying my bills…So now I’ve got money that I can spend on food instead of having to waste it on that crap. (Participant 17, 49-year-old white man) |