Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, School of Medicine, University of Washington, 1959 NE Pacific ST, Box 357238, Seattle, WA, 98195-7238, USA.
Center for Alcohol and Addiction Studies, Brown University School of Public Health, Providence, RI, USA.
BMC Public Health. 2024 Sep 27;24(1):2581. doi: 10.1186/s12889-024-20077-9.
Early in the pandemic, the United States population experienced a sharp rise in the prevalence rates of opioid use, social isolation, and pain interference. Given the high rates of pain reported by patients on medication for opioid use disorder (MOUD), the pandemic presented a unique opportunity to disentangle the relationship between opioid use, pain, and social isolation in this high-risk population. We tested the hypothesis that pandemic-induced isolation would partially mediate change in pain interference levels experienced by patients on MOUD, even when controlling for baseline opioid use. Such work can inform the development of targeted interventions for a vulnerable, underserved population.
Analyses used data from a cluster randomized trial (N = 188) of patients on MOUD across eight opioid treatment programs. As part of the parent trial, participants provided pre-pandemic data on pain interference, opioid use, and socio-demographic variables. Research staff re-contacted participants between May and June 2020 and 133 participants (71% response rate) consented to complete a supplemental survey that assessed pandemic-induced isolation. Participants then completed a follow-up interview during the pandemic that again assessed pain interference and opioid use. A path model assessed whether pre-pandemic pain interference had an indirect effect on pain interference during the pandemic via pandemic-induced isolation.
Consistent with hypotheses, we found evidence that pandemic-induced isolation partially mediated change in pain interference levels among MOUD patients during the pandemic. Higher levels of pre-pandemic pain interference and opioid use were both significantly associated with higher levels of pandemic-induced isolation. In addition, pre-pandemic pain interference was significantly related to levels of pain interference during the pandemic, and these pain levels were partially explained by the level of pandemic-induced isolation reported.
Patients on MOUD with higher use of opioids and higher rates of pain pre-pandemic were more likely to report feeling isolated during COVID-related social distancing and this, in turn, partially explained changes in levels of pain interference. These results highlight social isolation as a key risk factor for patients on MOUD and suggest that interventions promoting social connection could be associated with reduced pain interference, which in turn could improve patient quality of life.
NCT03931174 (Registered 04/30/2019).
在大流行早期,美国人口的阿片类药物使用、社会隔离和疼痛干扰患病率急剧上升。鉴于接受阿片类药物使用障碍(MOUD)药物治疗的患者报告的疼痛率很高,大流行提供了一个独特的机会,可以在这个高风险人群中解开阿片类药物使用、疼痛和社会隔离之间的关系。我们检验了这样一个假设,即大流行引起的隔离会部分中介接受 MOUD 治疗的患者疼痛干扰水平的变化,即使在控制基线阿片类药物使用的情况下也是如此。此类工作可以为弱势、服务不足的人群提供有针对性的干预措施。
分析使用了八项阿片类药物治疗计划中接受 MOUD 治疗的患者的一项集群随机试验(N=188)的数据。作为该试验的一部分,参与者提供了大流行前关于疼痛干扰、阿片类药物使用和社会人口变量的数据。研究人员于 2020 年 5 月至 6 月期间再次联系参与者,有 133 名参与者(71%的回复率)同意完成一项补充调查,该调查评估了大流行引起的隔离。参与者随后在大流行期间完成了一次随访访谈,再次评估了疼痛干扰和阿片类药物使用情况。路径模型评估了大流行前的疼痛干扰是否通过大流行期间引起的隔离对 MOUD 患者的大流行期间的疼痛干扰产生间接影响。
与假设一致,我们发现有证据表明,大流行引起的隔离部分中介了 MOUD 患者在大流行期间疼痛干扰水平的变化。大流行前较高的疼痛干扰和阿片类药物使用水平均与较高的大流行引起的隔离水平显著相关。此外,大流行前的疼痛干扰与大流行期间的疼痛干扰水平显著相关,而这些疼痛水平部分由报告的大流行引起的隔离水平解释。
大流行前使用阿片类药物和疼痛率较高的 MOUD 患者更有可能报告在 COVID 相关的社会隔离期间感到孤立,而这种情况反过来又部分解释了疼痛干扰水平的变化。这些结果强调了社会隔离是 MOUD 患者的一个关键风险因素,并表明促进社交联系的干预措施可能与疼痛干扰减少相关,进而改善患者的生活质量。
NCT03931174(注册于 2019 年 4 月 30 日)。