The American journal of drug and alcohol abuse
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Am J Drug Alcohol Abuse · Jan 2018
Medication-assisted treatment for youth with opioid use disorder: Current dilemmas and remaining questions.
The prevalence of risky opioid use, opioid use disorder, and related harms continue to rise among youth (adolescents and young adults age 15-25) in North America. With an increasing number of opioid overdoses, there remain significant barriers to care for youth with opioid use disorder, and there is an urgent need to expand evidence-based care for treatment of opioid use disorder among this population. Based on the extensive literature on treatment of opioid use disorder among adults, medicated-assisted treatment is likely to be an important or even essential component of treatment of opioid use disorder for most youth. In this article, we outline the current dilemmas and questions regarding the use of medication-assisted treatment among youth with opioid use disorder and propose some potential solutions based on the current evidence.
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Am J Drug Alcohol Abuse · Jan 2018
Transitioning from methadone to buprenorphine maintenance in management of opioid use disorder during pregnancy.
Opioid use disorder during pregnancy is a growing health concern. Methadone maintenance is the treatment of choice but emerging data indicate buprenorphine is a viable alternative. Due to costs and limited accessibility of methadone, pregnant women may require transition from methadone to buprenorphine for maintenance treatment. ⋯ Pregnant women transitioned from methadone to buprenorphine maintenance showed maternal and neonatal outcomes comparable to studies of women on buprenorphine throughout pregnancy. Infants born to buprenorphine-maintained women who abstained from illicit substances and other prescribed psychotropic medications experienced less severe NAS and shorter hospitalizations compared with women with illicit substance use and other psychotropic medications. These findings suggest women can safely be transitioned from methadone to buprenorphine during pregnancy.
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Am J Drug Alcohol Abuse · Jan 2018
High inpatient utilization among Veterans Health Administration patients with substance-use disorders and co-occurring mental health conditions.
Substance-use disorders (SUDs) are common and costly conditions. Understanding high inpatient utilization (HIU) among patients with SUD can inform the development of treatment approaches designed to reduce healthcare expenditures and improve service quality. ⋯ Substantial reductions in HIU among an SUD population will likely require treatment approaches that target patients with less-severe mental health conditions in addition to SMI. Cross-service collaborations (e.g., integration of medical providers in SUD care) and interventions designed to target issues and/or conditions that lead to HIU (e.g., homeless care services) may be critical to reducing HIU in this population.