Program of Public Health, Department of Health, Torrens University Australia, Melbourne, VIC, Australia.
Library & Learning Services, Torrens University Australia, Adelaide, SA, Australia.
Front Public Health. 2022 Jul 12;10:900733. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2022.900733. eCollection 2022.
The potential for digital initiatives for opioid harm reduction is boundless. Synthesized evidence on current interventions and their efficacy are emerging. This scoping review is an effort to aggregate Canadian and Australian digital health initiatives used to prevent opioid-related deaths and minimize harm, prior to and particularly during the pandemic of SARs-COVID-19, when the crisis escalated.
The Joanna Briggs Institute's methodological framework for conducting scoping reviews was used. Peer reviewed and gray literature published between January 2016 to October 2021 were included. Search translation was performed across CINAHL, Cochrane, SCOPUS, MEDLINE Complete, and ProQuest Public Health with consistent use of key search terms. Citation checks were also conducted. Studies included were written in English and reported on digital technologies to prevent opioid-related harm and/or mortality in participants aged 18 years or older in Australia and Canada.
A total of 16 publications were included in the final analysis (Australia = 5; Canada = 11). The most frequently reported digital technologies were telehealth to support access to treatment ( = 3) and mobile applications for overdose monitoring and prevention ( = 3). Telehealth-delivered opioid replacement therapy demonstrated equal outcomes and treatment retention rates compared to in-person and mobile applications for overdose monitoring demonstrated lifesaving capability through direct linkages with emergency response services.
Digital interventions to minimize opioid crisis related harm and overdose prevention are fast emerging in Australia and Canada. During the pandemic, the crisis escalated in both countries as a public health emergency, and different initiatives were trialed. Digital harm reduction solutions via mobile apps (or SaaS solutions) were found to have the potential to prevent accidental overdose deaths and save lives, if rendered through privacy preserved, secure and trust enabled methods that empower users. Knowledge sharing between the two countries, relating to suitable interventions, may add significant value in combatting the escalating opioid crisis in the post pandemic era.
数字干预措施在减少阿片类药物危害方面具有巨大潜力。当前干预措施及其疗效的综合证据正在出现。本范围综述旨在汇总用于预防阿片类药物相关死亡和减轻危害的加拿大和澳大利亚数字健康举措,这些举措是在 SARS-COVID-19 大流行之前和期间实施的,当时危机加剧。
采用乔安娜·布里格斯研究所(Joanna Briggs Institute)进行范围综述的方法框架。纳入了 2016 年 1 月至 2021 年 10 月期间发表的同行评审和灰色文献。在 CINAHL、Cochrane、SCOPUS、MEDLINE Complete 和 ProQuest Public Health 中进行了翻译搜索,并一致使用了关键搜索词。还进行了引文检查。纳入的研究使用英语撰写,并报告了数字技术在澳大利亚和加拿大 18 岁或以上参与者中预防阿片类药物相关危害和/或死亡率的情况。
最终分析共纳入 16 篇出版物(澳大利亚=5;加拿大=11)。报告最多的数字技术是支持获得治疗的远程医疗(=3)和用于监测和预防过量的移动应用程序(=3)。远程医疗提供的阿片类药物替代疗法与面对面治疗和用于监测过量的移动应用程序具有同等的效果和治疗保留率,并且通过与紧急响应服务的直接联系,移动应用程序证明了挽救生命的能力。
在澳大利亚和加拿大,减少阿片类药物危机相关危害和预防过量的数字干预措施正在迅速出现。在大流行期间,两国都将这场危机作为公共卫生紧急事件升级,并且试验了不同的举措。通过移动应用程序(或 SaaS 解决方案)实施的数字减少危害解决方案具有预防意外过量死亡和挽救生命的潜力,如果通过保留隐私、安全和启用信任的方法实施,这些方法能够赋予用户权力,那么就可以挽救生命。两国之间就适当干预措施进行知识共享,可能会在大流行后时代对抗不断升级的阿片类药物危机增加重要价值。