| Literature DB >> 35313903 |
Brendan Lew1,2, Claire Bodkin1, Robin Lennox1, Timothy O'Shea3, Gillian Wiwcharuk1, Suzanne Turner4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Opioid-related harms, including fatal and non-fatal overdoses, rose dramatically during the COVID-19 pandemic and presented unique challenges during outbreaks in congregate settings such as shelters. People who are deprived of permanent housing have a high prevalence of substance use and substance use disorders, and need nimble, rapid, and portable harm reduction interventions to address the harms of criminalized substance use in an evidence-based manner. CASE STUDY: In February 2021, a COVID-19 outbreak was declared at an emergency men's shelter in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. Building on pre-existing relationships, community and hospital-based addictions medicine providers and a local harm reduction group collaborated to establish a shelter-based opioid agonist treatment and safer supply program, and a volunteer run safer drug use space that also distributed harm reduction supplies. In the 4 weeks preceding the program, the rate of non-fatal overdoses was 0.93 per 100 nights of shelter bed occupancy. During the 26 days of program operation, there were no overdoses in the safer use space and the rate of non-fatal overdoses in the shelter was 0.17 per 100 nights of shelter bed occupancy. The odds ratio of non-fatal overdose pre-intervention to during intervention was 5.5 (95% CI 1.63-18.55, p = 0.0059). We were not able to evaluate the impact of providing harm reduction supplies and did not evaluate the impact of the program on facilitating adherence to public health isolation and quarantine orders. The program ended as the outbreak waned, as per the direction from the shelter operator.Entities:
Keywords: Case study; Controlled substances; Homeless shelters; Overdose; Substance use
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35313903 PMCID: PMC8935259 DOI: 10.1186/s12954-022-00614-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Harm Reduct J ISSN: 1477-7517
Fig. 1Four Components of the integrated SUS and safer supply program
Fig. 2Safer use space (SUS) layout
Total number of harm reduction supplies distributed
| Item | Number distributed |
|---|---|
| Number of people accessing harm reduction supplies | 125 |
| Methamphetamine pipes | 87 |
| Inhalation kits (2 stems per kit) | 19 |
| Individual needle/syringe | 151 |
| 2 hit kit (2 × needles, 2 × syringes, 2 × sterile water, 2 × cookers, 2 × alcohol swabs, tourniquets, Vitamin C, matches) | 107 |
| 10 hit kit ((10 × needles, 10 × syringes, 10 × sterile water, 10 × cookers, 10 × alcohol swabs, tourniquets, Vitamin C, matches) | 12 |
| Foil | 20 |
| Sharps containers | 3 |
| Condoms | 10 |
| Lubricant | 10 |
These totals did not include the supplies utilized by patients while accessing the space for injection and intranasal use on site
Non-fatal overdoses before and during the intervention
| 28 days prior to SUS operation (Jan 27–Feb 21 2021) | During SUS operation Feb 22–March 19 2021 (26 days) | |
|---|---|---|
| Total nights of shelter provided (sum of occupied beds per night for the period) | 2154 | 1778 |
| Number of non-fatal overdoses | 20 | 3a |
| Rate (non-fatal overdoses per 100 nights of shelter bed occupancy) | 0.93 | 0.17 |
aNone of these occurred in the SUS; they were on site at the shelter outside of the SUS