A Pilot Study of a Telemedicine-based Substance Use Disorder Evaluation to Enhance Access to Treatment Following Near-Fatal Opioid Overdose
Authors
Lai, Jeffrey TChapman, Brittany P
Carreiro, Stephanie
Costigan, Amy D.
Rodriguez-Perez, Karla M.
Gonzalez, Gerardo
Babu, Kavita M
UMass Chan Affiliations
Department of PsychiatryDivision of Medical Toxicology, Department of Emergency Medicine
Document Type
Conference PaperPublication Date
2020-01-07Keywords
emergency departmentopioid overdose
substance use treatment planning
substance use disorder
Emergency Medicine
Health Services Administration
Psychiatry
Psychiatry and Psychology
Substance Abuse and Addiction
Telemedicine
Therapeutics
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The opioid epidemic is a growing public health emergency in the United States, with deaths from opioid overdose having increased five-fold since 1999. Emergency departments (EDs) are the primary sites of medical care after near-fatal opioid overdose but are poorly equipped to provide adequate substance use treatment planning prior to discharge. In many underserved locales, limited access to clinicians trained in addiction medicine and behavioral health exacerbates this disparity. In an effort to improve post-overdose care in the ED, we developed a telemedicine protocol to facilitate timely access to substance use disorder evaluations. In this paper, we describe the conception and refinement of the telemedicine program, our experience with the first 20 participants, and potential implications of the platform on health disparities for individuals with opioid use disorder.Source
Lai JT, Chapman BP, Carreiro SP, Costigan AD, Rodriguez-Perez KM, Gonzalez G, Babu KM. A Pilot Study of a Telemedicine-based Substance Use Disorder Evaluation to Enhance Access to Treatment Following Near-Fatal Opioid Overdose. Proc Annu Hawaii Int Conf Syst Sci. 2020;2020:3488-3496. Epub 2020 Jan 7. PMID: 32015694; PMCID: PMC6996105.