Approaches, Barriers, and Facilitators in Statewide Initiative to Combat Opioid Overdose: A Narrative Review of Ohio's Experiences During the HEALing Communities Study.

IF 2.1 3区 医学 Q2 EMERGENCY MEDICINE
Jason McMullan, Will Mueller, Jennifer L Brown, Irene Ewing, Michael S Lyons, Joel Sprunger, John Winhusen, Thomas Collins
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Objectives: Opioid-associated fatal and non-fatal overdose rates continue to rise. Prehospital overdose education and naloxone distribution (OEND) programs are attractive harm-reduction strategies, as patients who are not transported by EMS after receiving naloxone have limited access to other interventions. This narrative summary describes our experiences with prehospital implementation of evidence-based OEND practices across Ohio as part of the HEALing Communities Study (HCS).

Methods: HCS was a parallel-group, cluster randomized, unblinded, wait-list controlled trial of 67 communities highly impacted by opioid-related overdose fatalities in four states, including Ohio. An EMS Intervention Design Team (IDT), consisting of EMS physicians, paramedics, and an EMS department Chief with an established OEND program, supported participating EMS agencies. Services of the IDT included protocol development, program training, and stigma-reduction education. HCS funding supported implementation costs and varied by county/agency.

Results: In 12 Ohio counties, 29 agencies implemented an OEND program; agencies served rural, suburban, and urban communities. While leaving naloxone kits with patients and/or families at an EMS call was universally adopted, additional OEND approaches were undertaken. Seven EMS agencies registered with the Ohio Department of Health's Project DAWN program, allowing hub-and-spoke distribution of state-provided naloxone to smaller OEND programs. An urban EMS agency targeted mass gatherings for OEND efforts; bicycle teams providing crowd medical response distributed leave-behind naloxone kits in a process mirroring traditional 9-1-1 calls while static first aid stations offered overdose educational materials, information on local resources, and take-home naloxone kits. A rural EMS agency allowed community members to request naloxone kits from agency headquarters. To address an overdose hotspot at an interstate rest area, a rural joint ambulance district partnered with the county health department to install and maintain a public-access naloxone station. Observed facilitators included Ohio's legal and regulatory environment, creating local definitions of success, identifying and empowering local champions, and operational solutions to ease OEND for practitioners. Stigma represents the biggest barrier, with ongoing education as the best solution. Incremental program implementation was most successful.

Conclusions: Our OEND implementation experiences across multiple Ohio EMS agencies identified several barriers, facilitators, and creative solutions that may inform future prehospital harm-reduction programs.

在全州范围内主动打击阿片类药物过量的方法、障碍和促进因素:在愈合社区研究期间对俄亥俄州经验的叙述回顾。
目的:阿片类药物相关致死性和非致死性用药过量率持续上升。院前用药过量教育和纳洛酮分发(OEND)计划是有吸引力的减少伤害的策略,因为接受纳洛酮后没有被EMS运送的患者获得其他干预措施的机会有限。这篇叙述性总结描述了我们在俄亥俄州院前实施循证OEND实践的经验,这是康复社区研究(HCS)的一部分。方法:HCS是一项平行组、集群随机、非盲、等待名单对照试验,涉及包括俄亥俄州在内的四个州67个受阿片类药物相关过量死亡严重影响的社区。EMS干预设计小组(IDT)由EMS医生、护理人员和EMS部门主管组成,并建立了OEND计划,为参与的EMS机构提供支持。IDT的服务包括协议制定、项目培训和减少耻辱的教育。卫生保健服务资助的执行费用因县/机构而异。结果:在俄亥俄州的12个县,29个机构实施了OEND计划;这些机构服务于农村、郊区和城市社区。虽然普遍采用在紧急医疗服务呼叫时将纳洛酮包留给患者和/或家属,但采取了额外的OEND方法。七家EMS机构在俄亥俄州卫生部的DAWN项目中注册,允许向较小的OEND项目中心和辐状分发国家提供的纳洛酮。一个城市紧急医疗服务机构针对大规模集会开展OEND工作;提供人群医疗响应的自行车队按照传统的911呼叫流程分发遗留纳洛酮包,而静态急救站则提供过量用药教育材料、当地资源信息和纳洛酮带回家包。一家农村紧急医疗服务机构允许社区成员向机构总部索取纳洛酮包。为了解决州际休息区过量用药的热点问题,一个农村联合救护车区与县卫生部门合作,安装并维护了一个向公众开放的纳洛酮站。观察到的促进因素包括俄亥俄州的法律和监管环境,创建成功的本地定义,识别和授权本地冠军,以及为从业者简化OEND的操作解决方案。耻辱是最大的障碍,持续的教育是最好的解决办法。渐进式方案的实施最为成功。结论:我们在俄亥俄州多个EMS机构实施OEND的经验确定了几个障碍、促进因素和创造性的解决方案,这些解决方案可能为未来的院前减少伤害计划提供信息。
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来源期刊
Prehospital Emergency Care
Prehospital Emergency Care 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
12.50%
发文量
137
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: Prehospital Emergency Care publishes peer-reviewed information relevant to the practice, educational advancement, and investigation of prehospital emergency care, including the following types of articles: Special Contributions - Original Articles - Education and Practice - Preliminary Reports - Case Conferences - Position Papers - Collective Reviews - Editorials - Letters to the Editor - Media Reviews.
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