Research on Opioid Overdose Shows More Aggressive Approach Needed

More than 300 West Virginians on Medicaid overdosed between 2014 and 2016. Researchers from Johns Hopkins School of Public Health wanted to see what kind of care those people got afterward.

They found that only about 10 percent of people who experienced a non-fatal overdose received appropriate follow-up and treatment after the overdose. Follow-up might be helping the person get on medication-assisted treatment, treatment for other psychiatric disorders and office visits. Kara Lofton spoke with Neel Koyawala – one of the study’s authors – via FaceTime about the findings and what they mean.

KOYAWALA: So the main the main implication of the study is that opioid overdoses are major life events and big opportunities for the healthcare system to increase appropriate treatment for individuals who experienced an overdose. So, this could be through funding programs that could connect people to care better, making sure there’s adequate access or capacity, following people over time to make sure they’re connected…among other things.

LOFTON: I found your study pretty surprising because we have had in the last couple of years, a push to do things like instill Quick Response Teams in communities. So 72 hours after an overdose, a team will go to a front door and might, you know, say: “Hey, I know you overdosed. Are you ready to be in treatment?” And of course, it’s not in every community, but they are present in the biggest communities in West Virginia. And it sounds like even with those initiatives, it’s still a small percentage of people getting treatment.

KOYAWALA: Yeah, we were similarly surprised to find such low levels of treatment. In fact, we were hoping to do further investigation to patterns of treatment after overdose. But we just couldn’t study that because so few people were getting treated.

LOFTON: What are the implications for a study like this? I mean what do you hope that comes out of it?

KOYAWALA: I think the biggest thing is just having first more awareness that few people are getting appropriate treatment after an overdose. I think people take it for granted that okay, the healthcare system must be responding. But we’re clearly not doing enough despite the significance of the opioid crisis right now. So, I think that’s the big one of the big takeaways is just raising awareness that there’s still a huge gap.

Second, I think looking at how healthcare systems can use emergency rooms to better respond and connect people with care. Are their protocols? Are their ability to follow up with people one week after two weeks after an overdose, even through a phone call or increasing programs that — like the rapid response treatment that you were mentioning.

Third, I think there’s opportunities to use peers who have benefited from appropriate treatment for opioid use disorder and kind of use them as advocates, peer advocates, who can start breaking down the stigma of what it means to get treated and any confusion around treatment and how successful these treatments can be.

I think the healthcare system also can build more capacity for mental health care and care for opioid use disorder.

Lastly, sometimes there’s just, there’s just stigma around these issues. And I think it’s important to realize that this is part of care for people, it’s a part of medical care and thinking about some more holistically not just thinking about the opioid use disorder, also the other psychiatric condition that someone may face because we didn’t see much change in those, in care for other psych conditions either. It’s kind of a holistic approach.

Editor’s Note: It should be noted that the data analysis doesn’t take into account recent efforts to change the stats. In December of 2017, Huntington launched a “quick response team” to try and address some of these issues. In the spring of 2018, Charleston launched their own program with funds from the Department of Health and Human Resources. A few months later, the DHHR awarded two more grants in southern and central WV to expand quick response teams. Koyawala said Johns Hopkins plans on evaluating the new data as it becomes available.

Further Research

The Johns Hopkins study isn’t the only one looking at opioid overdose deaths this year. 

To date, most of the efforts to impact the opioid epidemic have been on restricting access to opioids by changing opioid prescribing guidelines and law enforcement approaches. But a new collaborative study from Penn State and Boston University School of Medicine found that approach is having a modest effect, at best, on the number of opioid overdose deaths.

The authors took data from the National Survey on Drug Use and Health and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to develop a simulated model for the opioid crisis. The goal was to project what opioid overdose deaths might look like in the next decade if the same approach for tackling the crisis was continued.

They found that under the status quo, the total number of opioid overdose deaths in the United states would increase 147 percent from 2015-2025. The majority of those deaths would be from illicit opioid use. During the same time period, deaths from prescription opioid use declined marginally. They project opioid overdose deaths to peak in 2022 and then remain pretty stable thereafter.

The authors say the model shows that none of the current, studied interventions are likely to bring down overdose deaths to where they are today. So, to actually make a dent in the problem, federal and state governments are going to have to implement a more intensive multi-pronged approach that implements prevention, treatment and harm reduction simultaneously.

The study was published this month in the online Journal of the American Medical Association.

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting, with support from Marshall Health and Charleston Area Medical Center.

Cardiac Surgery May Result in More Complications in Patients with Opioid Use Disorder

A new study has found that cardiology patients with opioid use disorders have more complications, longer hospital stays and costlier surgeries.

The study looked at 5.7 million patients who underwent cardiac surgery and compared outcomes of those who had opioid use disorders and those who didn’t. While there wasn’t a significant difference the rate of death between the two groups, patients with opioid use disorders had more complications, longer length of stay in the hospital and higher costs.

Over the last 15 years, researchers said there’s been an 8-fold increase of opioid use disorder among cardiac surgery patients and even that may be underreported. Prolonged opioid use has been associated with cardiovascular risk, but the research isn’t clear as to why exactly there’s a connection.

In the conclusion, the authors wrote that cardiac surgery is safe for patients with opioid use disorder, but that the patients should be carefully monitored postoperatively for complications.

The study was published this week in the Journal of the American Medical Association.

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting, with support from the Marshall Health, Charleston Area Medical Center and WVU Medicine.

Gov. Justice Announces New Director of Drug Control Policy

Dr. Michael Brumage, former executive director of the Kanawha-Charleston Health Department, has been named director of the West Virginia Office of Drug Control Policy. 

Brumage replaces director Jim Johnson who retired from the position in January. In a press release, Governor Jim Justice said he’s confident that Brumage is the right person to tackle West Virginia’s opioid crisis.

The Department of Health and Human Resources has been directed by Justice to make the opioid crisis the state’s number one health priority. 

According to the DHHR, A West Virginian dies from an opioid overdose every ten hours.

Brumage said he plans on connecting people, systems and communities to the resources they need.

In a press conference, though, Justices said the state doesn’t have enough money to combat the issue in all 55 counties at once. Rather they’re going to start by directing money at one county in the north and one at the south.

“And then let that in itself expand to other counties throughout our state while at the same time we’re doing everything we possibly can to protect all of our counties in our state and do all the good we can possibly do,” Justice said. 

The Office of Drug Control Policy was created last year during the legislative session.

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting, with support from the Marshall Health, Charleston Area Medical Center and WVU Medicine.

W.Va. Drug Plan Calls for Limiting Prescriptions

Updated Friday January 12 at 4:18 p.m.

State health officials are proposing a multifaceted plan for confronting the drug crisis killing hundreds of West Virginians each year, one that would require action by everyone from lawmakers to doctors to judges to emergency responders to the general public.

Some of the changes might be possible to make administratively, but much of the work will depend on legislative approval.

“We have to stop this terrible drug epidemic. We have to,” Gov. Jim Justice said in his address to state lawmakers Wednesday night. “If we don’t it will cannibalize us.”

A dozen state senators that day had introduced legislation to generally limit initial doctor and dentist prescriptions of opiates for acute, or short-term, pain to seven days. The bill would limit those painkiller prescriptions to three days for minors and for emergency-room outpatients.

These and many other changes are recommended in a plan released Thursday by a panel of public health experts from West Virginia and Johns Hopkins University with state agency and public input. They’re taking additional comments for another week.

This plan recommends limiting initial opioid prescriptions, increasing oversight to stop inappropriate painkiller prescribing, and requiring all emergency responders to carry overdose antidotes. It also calls for expanding public awareness that addiction is a treatable disease, increasing diversion of criminal drug case defendants to treatment programs and increasing treatment options for all patients.

The report further calls for expanding programs to support families with someone addicted, expanding peer-based support and better access to contraceptives for people with drug disorders.

More than 30,000 West Virginians are already in drug treatment. The state has the nation’s highest drug overdose death rate, fueled by prescription painkillers.

Overdose deaths increased from 735 in 2015 to a record 884 statewide in 2016, and the toll could be rising still.

“Mixtures of opioids and stimulants such as amphetamines, methamphetamines, and cocaine are surging in 2017,” the panel wrote. “It appears likely there may be over 1,000 overdose deaths in West Virginia in 2017.”

Most involved opioids. While steady increases from 212 fatal overdoses in 2001 were initially driven by pharmaceuticals, the authors noted a shift to illicit heroin that began in 2012 has since increased with more potent fentanyl added to street drugs.

By examining hundreds of deaths, the Bureau of Public Health found that 81 percent had interacted with health systems, 56 percent had been jailed, and 71 percent were on Medicaid. Males were twice as likely to die from overdoses as females.

The report calls for mandatory hospital and emergency responder reporting of non-fatal overdoses, so that outreach can be arranged.

“This is a public health crisis of the highest order,” said Dr. Rahul Gupta, who heads the bureau.

The report is posted online at http://dhhr.wv.gov/bph/Pages/default.aspx.

Comment Sought on W.Va. Opioid Crisis Response Plan

Health officials in West Virginia say a plan to combat the state’s opioid crisis has been released for public comment.

The Department of Health and Human Resources released the response plan Thursday. It was prepared by a panel of public health experts after a review of public comments, a public meeting on Dec. 21 and input from state agencies.

Public comments will be accepted through Jan. 19 at bphcommunications@wv.gov.

The plan eventually will be presented to Gov. Jim Justice and the state Legislature. It focus on six areas, including prevention, early intervention, treatment, overdose reversal and recovery.

West Virginia Researcher Says Drug Suicides Undercounted

A West Virginia University researcher says the official U.S. suicide rate, which rose 34 percent from 2000 to 2016, fails to include many people who kill themselves purposely with drugs.

Ian Rockett, professor of epidemiology in WVU’s School of Public Health, led an international study released Wednesday by PLOS ONE, a journal published by the Public Library of Science.

Rocket says there is “a serious problem of suicide undercounting in the United States.”

Their analysis says detecting suicides by drug intoxication depends on authenticated suicide notes and psychiatric histories, noting such evidence if often missing even in more apparent suicides by shooting and hanging.

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