State program enables the identification of factors associated with naloxone awareness, self-efficacy, and use for overdose reversal: A cross-sectional, observational study in an urban emergency department population

0 PSYCHOLOGY, CLINICAL
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Abstract

Introduction

To assist the state of Ohio in addressing the opioid epidemic, the Ohio Attorney General appointed experts in a variety of academic disciplines to the Scientific Committee on Opioid Prevention and Education (SCOPE). The focus of SCOPE is the application of scientific principles to the development of prevention and educational strategies for reducing substance use disorder and related harms (e.g., promoting naloxone awareness). Naloxone awareness is a step in the naloxone cascade, which is a useful model for understanding the sequential steps laypeople must take to prepare themselves to intervene using naloxone; other steps include training and previous administration experience. Prior work has explored correlates of these steps among individuals with risky substance use, but fewer studies have focused on broader populations containing potential bystanders (e.g., family and community members).

Methods

This study was a secondary data analysis of patients from three urban emergency departments. Subsamples differed across five models (n = 479–1208) and included opioid-exposed and -naïve participants. Logistic regression characterized clinically useful sociodemographic predictors (e.g., race, ethnicity, education, employment, housing status) of naloxone awareness, self-efficacy (which relates to training), and previous-overdose administration. Two additional logistic regressions tested associations between risk factors for witnessing an opioid overdose and two cascade steps (awareness and self-efficacy).

Results

Non-White race, Hispanic ethnicity, and lower education predicted not being aware of naloxone; non-White race also predicted lower naloxone self-efficacy, and older age predicted lack of previous-overdose administration. Having family members with risky opioid use was heavily associated with awareness, while personal substance-use behaviors and previous overdose witnessing were associated with both awareness and higher naloxone self-efficacy.

Conclusions

Characteristics associated with lower likelihood of completing each cascade step highlight opportunities for targeted interventions. Specifically, findings indicated the importance of expanding naloxone education and training programs to more diverse populations and to family members of individuals with risky opioid use. Further, these findings demonstrate how a state-funded program such as SCOPE can have a positive impact on identifying strategies that may assist in reducing mortality associated with opioid overdose.

通过国家计划,可以确定与纳洛酮的认知度、自我效能以及使用纳洛酮逆转用药过量相关的因素:一项针对城市急诊科人群的横断面观察研究
导言为协助俄亥俄州应对阿片类药物流行病,俄亥俄州总检察长任命了多个学科的专家加入阿片类药物预防和教育科学委员会 (SCOPE)。SCOPE 的工作重点是将科学原理应用于制定预防和教育策略,以减少药物使用障碍和相关危害(例如,提高纳洛酮意识)。纳洛酮意识是纳洛酮级联中的一个步骤,它是一个有用的模型,可用于理解非专业人员为使用纳洛酮进行干预而必须采取的连续步骤;其他步骤包括培训和以往的使用经验。之前的工作已经探讨了这些步骤在高危吸毒者中的相关性,但很少有研究关注包含潜在旁观者(如家人和社区成员)的更广泛人群。子样本在五个模型(n = 479-1208)中有所不同,包括阿片类药物暴露者和未暴露者。逻辑回归描述了纳洛酮意识、自我效能(与培训有关)和先前用药过量的临床有用社会人口学预测因素(如种族、民族、教育、就业、住房状况)。另外两个逻辑回归测试了目睹阿片类药物过量的风险因素与两个级联步骤(意识和自我效能)之间的关联。结果非白人种族、西班牙裔和较低的教育程度预示着不知道使用纳洛酮;非白人种族也预示着纳洛酮自我效能较低,而年龄较大则预示着以前没有使用过过量纳洛酮。家庭成员有使用阿片类药物的风险与认识程度有很大关系,而个人药物使用行为和以前目睹过用药过量则与认识程度和较高的纳洛酮自我效能有关。具体而言,研究结果表明,将纳洛酮教育和培训计划扩展到更多不同人群以及有阿片类药物使用风险的个人的家庭成员非常重要。此外,这些研究结果还证明了由州政府资助的计划(如 SCOPE)如何能够对确定有助于降低阿片类药物过量相关死亡率的策略产生积极影响。
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来源期刊
Journal of substance use and addiction treatment
Journal of substance use and addiction treatment Biological Psychiatry, Neuroscience (General), Psychiatry and Mental Health, Psychology (General)
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