| Literature DB >> 33191004 |
Anna Meteliuk1, Samy J Galvez de Leon2, Lynn M Madden3, Iryna Pykalo4, Tatiana Fomenko1, Myroslava Filippovych4, Scott O Farnum5, Sergii Dvoryak4, Zahedul M Islam1, Frederick L Altice6.
Abstract
On March 16, 2020, Ukraine's Ministry of Health issued nonspecific interim guidance to continue enrolling patients in opioid agonist therapies (OAT) and transition existing patients to take-home dosing to reduce community COVID-19 transmission. Though the number of OAT patients increased modestly, the proportion receiving take-home dosing increased from 57.5% to 82.2%, which translates on average to 963,952 fewer clinic interactions annually (range: 728,652-1,016,895) and potentially 80,329 (range: 60,721-84,741) fewer hours of in-person clinical encounters. During the transition, narcologists (addiction specialists) expressed concerns about overdoses, the guidance contradicting existing legislation, and patient dropout, either from incarceration or inadequate public transportation. Though clinicians did observe some overdoses, short-term overall mortality remained similar to the previous year. As the country relaxes the interim guidance, we do not know to what extent governmental guidance or clinical practice will change to adopt the new guidance permanently or revert to pre-guidance regulations. Some future considerations that have come from COVID-19 are should dosing schedules continue to be flexible, should clinicians adopt telehealth, and should there be more overdose education and naloxone distribution? OAT delivery has improved and become more efficient, but clinicians should plan long-term should COVID-19 return in the near future. If the new efficiencies are maintained, it will free the workforce to further scale up OAT.Entities:
Keywords: Buprenorphine; COVID-19; Methadone; Opioid agonist therapies; Policy; Ukraine
Year: 2020 PMID: 33191004 DOI: 10.1016/j.jsat.2020.108164
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Subst Abuse Treat ISSN: 0740-5472