The first five years of implementing Missouri's medication first approach to opioid use disorder treatment: Plateaus, regressions, and underbellies of progress.

0 PSYCHOLOGY, CLINICAL
Rachel P Winograd, Brandon Park, Bridget Coffey, Rashmi Ghonasgi, Brittany Blanchard, Paul Thater, Katherine C Brown
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Abstract

Introduction: Missouri's Medication First ("MedFirst") approach promotes same-day and long-term low-threshold access to medications for opioid use disorder (MOUD). Since 2017, Missouri's SAMHSA-funded State Targeted and State Opioid Response (STR/SOR) grants have supported MedFirst services (both medical and psychosocial) for uninsured individuals with opioid use disorder at state-contracted treatment programs. Though MedFirst demonstrated early success, results - with attention to possible racial disparities - must be revisited after five years of implementation.

Methods: Using state behavioral health claims, we examined four outcomes: (1) MOUD utilization, (2) time-to-medication, (3) psychosocial service volume, and (4) substance use disorder (SUD) treatment retention. Models compared four groups: (a) individuals in MedFirst during the first and fifth year of implementation (2018 vs. 2022), (b) individuals in MedFirst compared to non-MedFirst, (c) individuals prior to MedFirst (2017) compared to individuals during MedFirst's fifth year (2022), and (d) White compared to Black individuals within and outside MedFirst.

Results: Overall, MedFirst outcomes were superior to non-MedFirst outcomes. Among individuals in MedFirst, however, outcomes were generally poorer in 2022 than in 2018, and Black individuals had shorter treatment episodes and were less likely to receive MOUD than White individuals. Overall, Missourians had only slightly better outcomes in 2022 than prior to STR/SOR initiation.

Conclusions: Since Missouri's initial implementation of STR/SOR-funded MedFirst, select overall treatment outcomes have improved. Within MedFirst programs, however, outcomes worsened over time, and racial disparities were evident. Though fentanyl's dominance of the drug supply alongside the COVID-19 pandemic contributed to these results, fidelity drift, particularly due to financial implications of MedFirst, likely also negatively impacted sustainability.

实施密苏里州药物优先方法治疗阿片类药物使用障碍的前五年:停滞期、倒退和进展的不足。
密苏里州的药物优先(“MedFirst”)方法促进了阿片类药物使用障碍(mod)的当日和长期低门槛药物获取。自2017年以来,密苏里州samhsa资助的州靶向和州阿片类药物反应(STR/SOR)赠款支持了MedFirst服务(医疗和社会心理),用于在州合同治疗项目中为没有保险的阿片类药物使用障碍患者提供服务。尽管MedFirst在早期取得了成功,但是在实施5年后,必须重新审视其结果——考虑到可能存在的种族差异。方法:使用国家行为健康声明,我们检查了四个结果:(1)mod使用,(2)药物治疗时间,(3)心理社会服务量,(4)物质使用障碍(SUD)治疗保留。模型比较了四组:(a) MedFirst实施第一年和第五年的个体(2018年与2022年),(b) MedFirst的个体与非MedFirst的个体,(c) MedFirst之前的个体(2017年)与MedFirst实施第五年(2022年)的个体,以及(d) MedFirst内外的白人与黑人个体的比较。结果:总体而言,MedFirst结果优于非MedFirst结果。然而,在MedFirst的个体中,2022年的结果通常比2018年差,黑人的治疗时间较短,接受mod的可能性低于白人。总体而言,2022年密苏里州患者的预后仅略好于STR/SOR启动前。结论:自密苏里州最初实施STR/ sor资助的MedFirst以来,选择的总体治疗结果有所改善。然而,在医疗优先项目中,结果随着时间的推移而恶化,种族差异也很明显。尽管芬太尼在药物供应中的主导地位以及COVID-19大流行导致了这些结果,但保真度的变化,特别是由于MedFirst的财务影响,也可能对可持续性产生负面影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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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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