阿片类药物使用障碍的治疗决策和出狱后的护理导航:可行性研究。

IF 5.1 Q1 SUBSTANCE ABUSE Substance Abuse and Rehabilitation Pub Date : 2019-10-22 eCollection Date: 2019-01-01 DOI:10.2147/SAR.S192045
Caleb J Banta-Green, Anthony S Floyd, Kristin Vick, Jen Arthur, Theresa J Hoeft, Judith I Tsui
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引用次数: 5

摘要

目的:阿片类药物使用障碍(OUD)是一种可以通过药物有效治疗的疾病。打破OUD和相关非法活动循环的一个主要挑战是,随着个人离开监狱或监狱,无缝地引入治疗阿片类药物使用障碍(MOUD)的药物。我们研究了试点干预的可行性,以将参与者与在押释放后正在进行的MOOD和心理社会支持联系起来。方法:该研究招募了从华盛顿州监狱释放到惩教部(DOC)社区监督的有OUD病史的成年人。参与者被随机分配到研究干预组或对照组。干预措施包括OUD和可用治疗的教育,支持个性化治疗决策,以及持续6个月的护理导航,以促进与所选治疗的联系。被随机分配到对照组的参与者接受了社区惩教官员的社区服务转介。护理导航活动日志记录了干预参与者的干预参与、服务利用率和需求。在1个月和6个月时进行随访访谈,以评估对干预的满意度。结果:15名参与者被纳入研究。全部为男性,大多数为白人(86.6%),平均年龄36.9岁。大多数(15名参与者中的14名)在监禁前几乎每天都有严重OUD的海洛因使用者。在七名干预参与者中,有两人希望立即开始服药。三名参与者报告称,在随后的随访期内,在有或没有社会支持和/或门诊咨询的情况下,开始服用丁丙诺啡或美沙酮,三名参与者在没有药物的情况下参加了社会支持和(或)门诊咨询。接受干预的参与者表示非常满意。我们讨论了研究实施的障碍和促进因素。结论:将参与者与出狱后正在进行的谅解备忘录和心理社会支持联系起来的干预措施在参与者中具有广泛的可接受性,在被招募者中实施是可行的;然而,入组人数远低于预期,研究干预并未证明在这一小样本参与者中促进释放后立即使用MOUD的预期效果。鉴于最近的研究显示了释放前药物启动的益处,应在释放前启动MOUD的系统中研究这种由两部分组成的干预措施的潜在附加益处。
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Opioid Use Disorder Treatment Decision Making And Care Navigation Upon Release From Prison: A Feasibility Study.

Purpose: Opioid use disorder (OUD) is a medical condition that is effectively treated with medications. A major challenge in breaking the cycle of OUD and related illegal activity is seamlessly introducing medications for opioid use disorder (MOUD) as individuals leave jail or prison. We examined the feasibility of a pilot intervention to link participants to ongoing MOUD and psychosocial supports following release from custody.

Methods: The study enrolled adults with a history of OUD released from Washington State prisons to Department of Corrections (DOC) community supervision. Participants were randomized to the study intervention or comparison group. The intervention consisted of education on OUD and available treatments, support with individualized treatment decision making, and continued care navigation for 6 months to facilitate linkage to chosen treatments. Participants randomized to the control condition received referral to services in the community from their community corrections officers. A care navigation activity log documented intervention participants' intervention engagement, service utilization, and needs. Follow-up interviews were conducted at 1 and 6 months to assess satisfaction with the intervention.

Results: Fifteen participants were enrolled. All were male, most were white (86.6%) and the average age was 36.9 years. The majority (14 of 15 participants) were near-daily heroin users with severe OUD prior to incarceration. Of the seven intervention participants, two wished to start medications immediately. Three participants reported starting buprenorphine or methadone in the subsequent follow-up period, with or without social support and/or outpatient counseling, and three reported enrolling in social support and/or outpatient counseling without medications. Participants who received the intervention reported high satisfaction. We discuss barriers and facilitators to study implementation.

Conclusion: An intervention to link participants to ongoing MOUD and psychosocial supports following release from prison had broad acceptability among participants and was feasible to implement among those recruited; however, enrollment was much lower than anticipated and the study intervention did not demonstrate the intended effect to facilitate use of MOUD immediately post-release in this small sample of participants. Given recent research showing benefits of pre-release medication initiation, the potential added benefits of this two-part intervention should be studied in systems that initiate MOUD prior to release.

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期刊最新文献
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