| Literature DB >> 33203460 |
Marcus Castillo1, Brianna Conte1, Sam Hinkes1, Megan Mathew1, C J Na1, Ainhoa Norindr1, David P Serota2, David W Forrest3, Amar R Deshpande1, Tyler S Bartholomew4, Hansel E Tookes2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: The COVID-19 pandemic led to the closure of the IDEA syringe services program medical student-run free clinic in Miami, Florida. In an effort to continue to serve the community of people who inject drugs and practice compassionate and non-judgmental care, the students transitioned the clinic to a model of TeleMOUD (medications for opioid use disorder). We describe development and implementation of a medical student-run telemedicine clinic through an academic medical center-operated syringe services program.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Medications for opioid use disorder; Student-run clinic; Telehealth
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33203460 PMCID: PMC7671179 DOI: 10.1186/s12954-020-00438-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Harm Reduct J ISSN: 1477-7517
Fig. 1TeleMOUD care cascade. The steps between appointment request, completion of appointment, and follow-ups are displayed in descending boxes. Boxes on the right provide details on services provided or reasons for falling out of the care cascade. The mean number of days between each step is presented. *Of those who dropped out from MOUD dispensed to follow-up appointment, one person entered the hospital for behavioral and mental health services, and one person was lost to follow up
Descriptive statistics of those accessing telehealth during COVID-19 (N = 22)
| Characteristic | |
|---|---|
| Age (median, IQR) | 35.5 (33–51) |
| Biological sex | |
| Male | 14 (67) |
| Female | 7 (33) |
| Race/ethnicity | |
| White non-Hispanic | 9 (43) |
| Black non-Hispanic | 4 (19) |
| Hispanic | 8 (38) |
| IDEA SSP participant | |
| Yes | 11 (52) |
| No | 10 (48) |
| Current injection drug use | |
| Yes | 10 (50) |
| No | 10 (50) |
| Substances injected ( | |
| Heroin | 8 (80) |
| Fentanyl | 5 (50) |
| Cocaine | 2 (20) |
| Other (ketamine) | 1 (10) |
| Self-reported HIV status | |
| Positive | 3 (14) |
| Negative | 16 (76) |
| Unknown | 2 (10) |
| Self-reported HCV status | |
| Positive | 8 (38) |
| Negative | 10 (48) |
| Unknown | 3 (14) |