Literature DB >> 33397794

Michigan system for opioid overdose surveillance.

Jason Goldstick1,2, Amanda Ballesteros3,2, Carol Flannagan2,4, Jessica Roche3,2, Carl Schmidt5, Rebecca M Cunningham3,2.   

Abstract

Community rapid response may reduce opioid overdose harms, but is hindered by the lack of timely data. To address this need, we created and evaluated the Michigan system for opioid overdose surveillance (SOS). SOS integrates suspected fatal overdose data from Medical Examiners (MEs), and suspected non-fatal overdoses (proxied by naloxone administration) from the Michigan Emergency Medical Services (EMS) into a web-based dashboard that was developed with stakeholder feedback. Authorised stakeholders can view approximate incident locations and automated spatiotemporal data summaries, while the general public can view county-level summaries. Following Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) surveillance system evaluation guidelines, we assessed simplicity, flexibility, data quality, acceptability, sensitivity, positive value positive (PVP), representativeness, timeliness and stability of SOS. Data are usually integrated into SOS 1-day postincident, and the interface is updated weekly for debugging and new feature addition, suggesting high timeliness, stability and flexibility. Regarding representativeness, SOS data cover 100% of EMS-based naloxone adminstrations in Michigan, and receives suspected fatal overdoses from MEs covering 79.1% of Michigan's population, but misses those receiving naloxone from non-EMS. PVP of the suspected fatal overdose indicator is nearly 80% across MEs. Because SOS uses pre-existing data, added burden on MEs/EMS is minimal, leading to high acceptability; there are over 300 authorised SOS stakeholders (~6 new registrations/week) as of this writing, suggesting high user acceptability. Using a collaborative, cross-sector approach we created a timely opioid overdose surveillance system that is flexible, acceptable, and is reasonably accurate and complete. Lessons learnt can aid other jurisdictions in creating analogous systems. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2021. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.

Entities:  

Keywords:  descriptive epidemiology; drugs; epidemiology; poisoning; surveillance

Year:  2021        PMID: 33397794     DOI: 10.1136/injuryprev-2020-043882

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Inj Prev        ISSN: 1353-8047            Impact factor:   2.399


  2 in total

1.  Commentary: Reducing youth firearm violence and the associated health disparities requires enhanced surveillance and modern behavioral intervention strategies - a commentary on Bottiani et al. (2021).

Authors:  Jason E Goldstick; Elinore J Kaufman; M Kit Delgado; Jonathan Jay; Patrick M Carter
Journal:  J Child Psychol Psychiatry       Date:  2021-04-04       Impact factor: 8.982

2.  Pharmacists and opioid use disorder care during COVID-19: Call for action.

Authors:  Insaf Mohammad; Dena Berri; Victoria Tutag Lehr
Journal:  J Am Coll Clin Pharm       Date:  2021-11-08
  2 in total

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