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Kelowna mom explains how safer supply at Interior Health is saving lives | iNFOnews

Kelowna mom explains how safer supply at Interior Health is saving lives | iNFOnews
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United-kingdom , Okanagan , British-columbia , Canada , Kelowna , Kamloops , Vancouver , Canadian , British , Georgina-whitehouse , Darryl-dyck , Helen-jennens

Minnesota to receive $66 million in opioid settlements

(St. Paul, MN)--Minnesota communities will see around 66-million dollars this year from the largest of the state’s opioid settlements. Attorney General Keith Ellison gave an update Wednesday on Minnesota’s progress

Minnesota , United-states , Minnesotans , Keith-ellison , General-keith-ellison , Phenols , Orphine , Pioid-antagonists , Pioid-peptides , Pioid-agonist-treatment , Pioid-modulator

"Economic analysis of out-of-pocket costs among people in opioid agonis" by Anh Dam Tran, Rory Chen et al.

BACKGROUND: Out-of-pocket costs for opioid agonist treatment (OAT) constitute a barrier to treatment entry and retention.This study examines OAT clients' total out-of-pocket costs (including dispensing fees, travel costs and OAT-related appointment costs) in different treatment settings (public clinics, community pharmacies, and private clinics). METHODS: Cross-sectional survey of 402 people with opioid drug use (OUD) in New South Wales (NSW), Victoria (VIC), Tasmania (TAS), Australia; 266 clients (66%) currently receiving methadone, buprenorphine or buprenorphine-naloxone treatment were asked about dispensing fees, travel costs and OAT-related appointment costs in the past 28 days. A two-part regression model was used to deal with non-normal distributions of costing data (right skew and excess zeros). RESULTS: Among clients currently receiving OAT, 87% paid out-of-pocket costs. Among those who paid out-of-pocket costs (N=194), travel costs accounted for more than half of total costs (52%), followed by dispensing fees (44%). The mean monthly total out-of-pocket costs were AU$135 (SD: AU$121) for public clinics, AU$161 (SD: AU$110) to AU$214 (SD: AU$166) for community pharmacies and AU$355 (SD: AU$159) for private clinics. Compared to participants in NSW private clinics, those at public clinics paid one third the total out-of-pocket costs (coefficient = 0.33; 95%CI = 0.23-0.48) and those at NSW, TAS, VIC pharmacies paid approximately half the costs (coefficient = 0.58; 95%CI = 0.42-0.79; coefficient = 0.51; 95%CI = 0.36-0.72; coefficient = 0.47; 95%CI = 0.34-0.66, respectively). People in OAT for more than a year paid half the total out-of-pocket costs, compared with those in OAT less than a year (coefficient = 0.49, 95%CI = 0.31-0.77). CONCLUSIONS: Participants in the current study spent one-eighth of their income on out-of-pocket costs associated with OAT representing a substantial financial burden. Total out-of-pocket costs disproportionately affects those who are newer in treatment and receiving fewer unsupervised doses. Considering and addressing total out-of-pocket costs, especially travel costs and dispensing fees, to clients is critical to prevent cost from being a barrier from receiving effective care.

Australia , New-south-wales , Clinic , Ispensing-fees , Pioid-agonist-treatment , Ut-of-pocket-costs ,

"Outcomes of a single-arm implementation trial of extended-release subc" by Michael Farrell, Jeyran Shahbazi et al.

Background: Opioid agonist treatment (OAT) is an effective intervention for opioid dependence. Extended-release buprenorphine injections (BUP-XR) may have additional potential benefits over sublingual buprenorphine. This single-arm trial evaluated outcomes among people receiving 48 weeks of BUP-XR in diverse community healthcare settings in Australia, permitting examination of outcomes when BUP-XR is delivered in standard practice. Methods: Participants were recruited from a network of specialist public drug treatment services, primary care and some private practices in three states. Following a minimum 7 days on 8–32 mg of sublingual buprenorphine (±naloxone), participants received monthly subcutaneous BUP-XR injections administered by a healthcare practitioner and completed monthly research interviews. The primary endpoint was retention in treatment at 48 weeks. Findings: Participants (n = 100) were 28% women, mean age 44 years with a long history of OAT (median 5.8 years); heroin was the most common opioid of concern (58%). Treatment retention at 24 and 48 weeks was 86% and 75%, respectively. Participants with past-month injecting drug use (OR 0.23; 95%CI: 0.09–0.61) or heroin use (OR 0.23; 95%CI: 0.08–0.65) at baseline had lower odds of being retained in treatment to 48 weeks. Reductions in multiple forms of extra-medical drug use were observed. Improvements in quality of life, participation in employment, and treatment satisfaction measures were also observed. Interpretation: This real-world implementation study of BUP-XR demonstrated high retention and treatment satisfaction. This study provides important additional data on the uptake and experience of clients, with relevance for policy makers, health service planners, administrators, and practitioners. Funding: Indivior. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT03809143

Australia , Buprenorphine , Pioid-agonist-treatment , Pioid-dependence ,