Consortium for Advanced Science and Engineering, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, United States of America.
Decision and Infrastructure Sciences, Argonne National Laboratory, Lemont, Illinois, United States of America.
PLoS Comput Biol. 2024 Jul 26;20(7):e1012307. doi: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1012307. eCollection 2024 Jul.
Access to treatment and medication for opioid use disorder (MOUD) is essential in reducing opioid use and associated behavioral risks, such as syringe sharing among persons who inject drugs (PWID). Syringe sharing among PWID carries high risk of transmission of serious infections such as hepatitis C and HIV. MOUD resources, such as methadone provider clinics, however, are often unavailable to PWID due to barriers like long travel distance to the nearest methadone provider and the required frequency of clinic visits. The goal of this study is to examine the uncertainty in the effects of travel distance in initiating and continuing methadone treatment and how these interact with different spatial distributions of methadone providers to impact co-injection (syringe sharing) risks. A baseline scenario of spatial access was established using the existing locations of methadone providers in a geographical area of metropolitan Chicago, Illinois, USA. Next, different counterfactual scenarios redistributed the locations of methadone providers in this geographic area according to the densities of both the general adult population and according to the PWID population per zip code. We define different reasonable methadone access assumptions as the combinations of short, medium, and long travel distance preferences combined with three urban/suburban travel distance preference. Our modeling results show that when there is a low travel distance preference for accessing methadone providers, distributing providers near areas that have the greatest need (defined by density of PWID) is best at reducing syringe sharing behaviors. However, this strategy also decreases access across suburban locales, posing even greater difficulty in regions with fewer transit options and providers. As such, without an adequate number of providers to give equitable coverage across the region, spatial distribution cannot be optimized to provide equitable access to all PWID. Our study has important implications for increasing interest in methadone as a resurgent treatment for MOUD in the United States and for guiding policy toward improving access to MOUD among PWID.
获得阿片类药物使用障碍(MOUD)的治疗和药物是减少阿片类药物使用和相关行为风险(如注射毒品者之间共用注射器)的关键。注射毒品者之间共用注射器会大大增加感染丙型肝炎和 HIV 等严重感染的风险。然而,由于距离最近的美沙酮提供者的旅行距离长和诊所就诊频率要求等障碍,美沙酮提供者诊所等 MOUD 资源往往无法为注射毒品者提供。本研究的目的是研究旅行距离对启动和持续美沙酮治疗的效果的不确定性,以及这些效果如何与美沙酮提供者的不同空间分布相互作用,从而影响共同注射(共用注射器)风险。使用美国伊利诺伊州芝加哥大都市区的美沙酮提供者的现有位置建立了空间可达性的基线情景。接下来,根据一般成年人口密度和每个邮政编码的注射毒品者人口密度,在这个地理区域重新分配美沙酮提供者的位置,以模拟不同的反事实情景。我们将不同的合理美沙酮获取假设定义为短、中、长旅行距离偏好的组合,以及三种城市/郊区旅行距离偏好的组合。我们的建模结果表明,当人们对获取美沙酮提供者的旅行距离偏好较低时,将提供者分布在最需要的地区(根据注射毒品者的密度定义)是减少共用注射器行为的最佳选择。然而,这种策略也会降低郊区地区的可达性,在过境选择和提供者较少的地区造成更大的困难。因此,在没有足够数量的提供者为该地区的所有注射毒品者提供公平覆盖的情况下,空间分布无法优化,以确保所有注射毒品者都能公平获得 MOUD。我们的研究对增加美国对美沙酮作为 MOUD 复兴治疗方法的兴趣以及指导改善注射毒品者获得 MOUD 的政策具有重要意义。