Warrington Jill S, Brett Alexa, Foster Heather, Brandon Jamie, Francis-Fath Samuel, Joseph Michael, Fung Mark
Aspenti Health, South Burlington, VT, USA.
Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Robert Larner College of Medicine, University of Vermont Medical Center, VT, USA.
Acad Pathol. 2020 Sep 18;7:2374289520953557. doi: 10.1177/2374289520953557. eCollection 2020 Jan-Dec.
Patients with substance use disorders (SUD) are at increased risk of both coronavirus disease-19 complications as well as exacerbations of their current conditions due to social distancing and isolation. Innovations that provide increased access to support substance use disorder patients may mitigate long-term sequelae associated with continued or renewed drug use. To improve patient access during the coronavirus disease-19 pandemic, we deployed a mobile unit to enable access to urine drug testing where needed for patients suffering from substance use disorder. Over a 3-week pilot program, 54 patients received urine drug testing across 5 providers and 8 zip codes. The mobile unit was cost-effective, demonstrating a volume-dependent 19% lower cost compared to pre-coronavirus disease-19 patient service centers in a similar geographic region. The mobile unit was well-received by patients and providers with an average of 9 out of 10 satisfaction scores and allowed for access to urine drug testing for 67% patients who would not have received testing during this time frame. No statistically significant differences were found in substance use positivity rates in comparison to pre-coronavirus disease findings; however, some shifts in use included higher rates of fentanyl and opioid positivity and reductions in tetrahydrocannabinol and cocaine use in the mobile collections setting. Deployment of mobile collection services during the coronavirus disease-19 pandemic has shown to be an effective mechanism for supporting patients suffering from substance use disorder, allowing for access to care of this often stigmatized, vulnerable population.
患有物质使用障碍(SUD)的患者因社交距离和隔离措施,感染冠状病毒病-19并发症以及病情加重的风险增加。能够增加物质使用障碍患者获得支持途径的创新举措,可能会减轻与持续或重新使用药物相关的长期后遗症。为了在冠状病毒病-19大流行期间改善患者获得服务的机会,我们部署了一个移动检测单元,以便在有需要时为患有物质使用障碍的患者提供尿液药物检测。在为期3周的试点项目中,54名患者通过5家医疗机构和8个邮政编码区域接受了尿液药物检测。该移动检测单元具有成本效益,与类似地理区域内冠状病毒病-19疫情前的患者服务中心相比,成本因检测量而降低了19%。该移动检测单元受到患者和医疗机构的好评,满意度平均得分10分中有9分,并且使67%在此期间原本无法接受检测的患者能够获得尿液药物检测。与冠状病毒病-19疫情前的检测结果相比,物质使用阳性率没有发现统计学上的显著差异;然而,一些使用情况有所变化,包括芬太尼和阿片类药物阳性率较高,以及在移动采集环境中四氢大麻酚和可卡因的使用有所减少。在冠状病毒病-19大流行期间部署移动采集服务已证明是支持患有物质使用障碍患者的有效机制,使这个经常受到污名化的弱势群体能够获得医疗服务。