Yale School of Medicine, Department of Emergency Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA; Yale Program in Addiction Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA.
Yale School of Medicine, Department of Emergency Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA; Yale Program in Addiction Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2021 Feb 1;219:108428. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2020.108428. Epub 2020 Nov 26.
BACKGROUND Little is known regarding the sociodemographic and clinical characteristics of emergency department (ED) patients with untreated opioid use disorder (OUD) and the relationship of those characteristics with whether they were seeking a referral to substance use treatment at the time of their ED visit. METHODS Using data collected from 2/2017-1/2019 from participants enrolled in Project ED Health (CTN-0069), we conducted a cross-sectional analysis of patients with untreated moderate to severe OUD presenting to one of four EDs in Baltimore, New York City, Cincinnati, or Seattle. Sociodemographic and clinical correlates, and International Classification of Diseases Tenth Revision (ICD-10) diagnosis codes related to opioid withdrawal, injection-related infection, other substance use, overdose, and OUD of those seeking and not seeking a referral to substance use treatment on presentation were compared using univariate analyses. RESULTS Among 394 study participants, 15.2 % (60/394) came to the ED seeking a referral to substance use treatment. No differences in age, gender, education, health insurance status or housing stability were detected between those seeking and not seeking referral to substance use treatment. Those seeking a referral to substance use treatment were less likely to have urine toxicology testing positive for amphetamine [17 % (10/60) vs 31 % (104/334), p = 0.023] and methamphetamine [23 % (14/60) vs 40 % (132/334), p = 0.017] compared to those not seeking a referral. CONCLUSION Most patients with untreated OUD seen in the EDs were not seeking a referral to substance use treatment. Active identification, treatment initiation, and coding may improve ED efforts to address untreated OUD.
对于未接受治疗的阿片类药物使用障碍(OUD)的急诊科(ED)患者的社会人口学和临床特征知之甚少,并且这些特征与他们在 ED 就诊时是否寻求药物使用治疗的转介之间的关系也知之甚少。
使用 2017 年 2 月至 2019 年 1 月期间从参与项目 ED 健康(CTN-0069)的参与者中收集的数据,我们对在巴尔的摩、纽约市、辛辛那提或西雅图的四家 ED 就诊的患有未经治疗的中度至重度 OUD 的患者进行了横断面分析。使用单变量分析比较了就诊时寻求和未寻求药物使用治疗转介的患者的社会人口学和临床相关性以及与阿片类药物戒断、注射相关感染、其他物质使用、过量和 OUD 相关的国际疾病分类第十版(ICD-10)诊断代码。
在 394 名研究参与者中,15.2%(60/394)因寻求药物使用治疗的转介而来到 ED。在寻求和不寻求药物使用治疗转介的患者之间,年龄、性别、教育程度、医疗保险状况或住房稳定性没有差异。寻求药物使用治疗转介的患者尿液毒理学检测阳性的阿片类药物[17%(10/60)比 31%(104/334),p=0.023]和苯丙胺[23%(14/60)比 40%(132/334),p=0.017]的可能性较小,与那些不寻求转介的患者相比。
在 ED 就诊的未接受治疗的 OUD 患者中,大多数人没有寻求药物使用治疗的转介。积极的识别、治疗启动和编码可能会改善 ED 解决未治疗 OUD 的努力。