| Literature DB >> 34886850 |
Ellis Jaewon Yeo1,2, Hannah Kralles3,4, David Sternberg3, Dana McCullough3, Ajetha Nadanasabesan3, Richard Mayo3, Hana Akselrod5, Jillian Catalanotti5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The COVID-19 pandemic has had especially devastating effects on people who use drugs. Due to pandemic protocols in the USA, medication-assisted treatment (MAT) regulations became more flexible, permitting our community-based nonprofit organization to transition its low-threshold MAT clinic to an audio-only telehealth model of care in 2020. Lessons learned have the potential to improve MAT delivery to people with OUD. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Buprenorphine; COVID-19; Harm reduction; Medication-assisted treatment; Opioid use disorder; Telehealth
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34886850 PMCID: PMC8655329 DOI: 10.1186/s12954-021-00578-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Harm Reduct J ISSN: 1477-7517
Overall demographic and clinical characteristics of patients
| Baseline characteristics | Total |
|---|---|
| Age (mean years ± SD) | 52.8 ± 11.4 |
| Male | 206 (74.4) |
| Black | 183 (90.6) |
| White | 18 (8.9) |
| Hispanic | 1 (0) |
| Unhoused | 73 (26.6) |
| Living in own place | 116 (42.3) |
| Living with others | 78 (28.5) |
| Transitional | 7 (2.6) |
| Full time | 17 (6.3) |
| Part time | 32 (11.8) |
| Not working | 184 (67.6) |
| Looking for work | 39 (14.3) |
| Injection | 47 (17.3) |
| Snort | 154 (56.8) |
| Both | 70 (25.8) |
| Ever overdosed | 94 (33.8) |
| Prescribed suboxone | 69 (24.9) |
| Prescribed methadone | 55 (19.9) |
| Prescribed suboxone and methadone | 24 (8.7) |
| “Street” suboxone | 56 (20.2) |
| “Street” methadone | 5 (1.8) |
| “Street” suboxone and methadone | 7 (2.5) |
| Crack/cocaine | 78 (28.3) |
| Marijuana | 56 (20.3) |
| Meth | 11 (4.0) |
| PCP | 45 (16.3) |
| Benzos | 23 (8.3) |
| Alcohol | 23 (8.3) |
| Tobacco | 174 (63.0) |
| HTN | 98 (35.4) |
| Diabetes | 33 (11.9) |
| HIV positive | 20 (7.2) |
| On HIV treatment | 15 (5.4) |
| HCV positive | 65 (23.5) |
| Already treated | 50 (18.1) |
| Treated in our ID Clinic | 19 (6.9) |
| PTSD | 39 (14.1) |
| Schizophrenia | 30 (10.8) |
| Bipolar | 59 (21.3) |
| Depression | 112 (40.4) |
| Anxiety | 62 (22.7) |
| Yes | 190 (68.6) |
Retention rates as of December 2020 and reasons for discontinuation for patients inducted on buprenorphine-naloxone therapy (n = 277)
| Number (%) | |
|---|---|
| 277 | |
| Continued treatment as of December 2020 | 190 (68.6) |
| 90-day retention | 223 (84.5) |
| 180-day retention | 192 (79.0) |
| 166 | |
| 90-day retention | 156 (93.9) |
| 180-day retention | 151 (91.5) |
| 365-day retention | 110 (79.1) |
| 111 | |
| 90-day retention | 67 (68.4) |
| 180-day retention | 40 (51.9) |
| 87 (31.4) | |
| Reason unknown | 53 (19.1) |
| Transferred MAT care elsewhere | 23 (8.3) |
| Deceased | 5 (1.8) |