Margaret Shang, Ilana Hull, Jane M Liebschutz, Michael Abesamis, Michael Lynch, Kenichi Tamama, Lauren Glikes, Payel Jhoom Roy, Roberto León-Barriera, Joshua A Shulman, Brent Thiel, Krupa Patel, Danielle Heffner, Janine Then, Joan Mapel, Kimberly Baker, Graciela Bauzá, Jennifer Rickens, Simi Padival, John Alexander Viehman, Varidhi Nauriyal, Gayle Gordillo, Teun Teunis, Nicole J Jarrett, Cecilia Zamarripa, Joshua Lee, Eugenia Mangel, Matan Arnon, Kristian Feterik, Raagini Jawa
{"title":"Building Multidisciplinary Consensus on Inpatient Xylazine Management through Clinical Protocols.","authors":"Margaret Shang, Ilana Hull, Jane M Liebschutz, Michael Abesamis, Michael Lynch, Kenichi Tamama, Lauren Glikes, Payel Jhoom Roy, Roberto León-Barriera, Joshua A Shulman, Brent Thiel, Krupa Patel, Danielle Heffner, Janine Then, Joan Mapel, Kimberly Baker, Graciela Bauzá, Jennifer Rickens, Simi Padival, John Alexander Viehman, Varidhi Nauriyal, Gayle Gordillo, Teun Teunis, Nicole J Jarrett, Cecilia Zamarripa, Joshua Lee, Eugenia Mangel, Matan Arnon, Kristian Feterik, Raagini Jawa","doi":"10.1177/29767342251329681","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>The evolving unregulated drug supply in the United States has led to an unprecedented rise in xylazine-adulterated synthetic opioid use-related morbidity and mortality, of which Pennsylvania shoulders a disproportionate burden. People experiencing these xylazine harms who seek acute medical care require complex clinical management, multidisciplinary coordination, and appropriate linkage to outpatient care. We describe our experience leading a hospital-wide multidisciplinary xylazine workgroup from February to June 2024 to collaboratively develop time-sensitive clinical protocols on inpatient management of patients exposed to xylazine. Workgroup participants were organized into three subgroups: (1) toxicology screening and harm reduction; (2) withdrawal management; and (3) inpatient wound care management and linkage to outpatient wound care. We summarize our implementation process and clinical protocol recommendations of each subgroup and highlight important cross-cutting issues related to the changing drug supply, standardized patient and provider educational tools, care coordination, and next steps.</p>","PeriodicalId":516535,"journal":{"name":"Substance use & addiction journal","volume":" ","pages":"29767342251329681"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2025-04-15","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Substance use & addiction journal","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1177/29767342251329681","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
The evolving unregulated drug supply in the United States has led to an unprecedented rise in xylazine-adulterated synthetic opioid use-related morbidity and mortality, of which Pennsylvania shoulders a disproportionate burden. People experiencing these xylazine harms who seek acute medical care require complex clinical management, multidisciplinary coordination, and appropriate linkage to outpatient care. We describe our experience leading a hospital-wide multidisciplinary xylazine workgroup from February to June 2024 to collaboratively develop time-sensitive clinical protocols on inpatient management of patients exposed to xylazine. Workgroup participants were organized into three subgroups: (1) toxicology screening and harm reduction; (2) withdrawal management; and (3) inpatient wound care management and linkage to outpatient wound care. We summarize our implementation process and clinical protocol recommendations of each subgroup and highlight important cross-cutting issues related to the changing drug supply, standardized patient and provider educational tools, care coordination, and next steps.