Addiction science & clinical practice




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Financial sustainability of payment models for office-based opioid treatment in outpatient clinics

Dominic Hodgkin, Constance Horgan & Gavin Bart

doi : 10.1186/s13722-021-00253-7

Addiction Science & Clinical Practice volume 16, Article number: 45 (2021)

Office-Based Opioid Treatment (OBOT) is a delivery model which seeks to make medications for opioid use disorder (MOUD), particularly buprenorphine, widely available in general medical clinics and offices. Despite evidence supporting its effectiveness and cost-effectiveness, uptake of the OBOT model has been relatively slow. One important barrier to faster diffusion of OBOT may be the financial challenges facing clinics that could adopt it.

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Receipt of medications for opioid use disorder among youth engaged in primary care: data from 6 health systems

Sarah M. Bagley, Laura Chavez, Jordan M. Braciszewski, Mary Akolsile, Denise M. Boudreau, Gwen Lapham, Cynthia I. Campbell, Gavin Bart, Bobbi Jo H. Yarborough, Jeffrey H. Samet, Andrew J. Saxon, Rebecca C. Rossom, Ingrid A. Binswanger, Mark T. Murphy, Joseph E. Glass, Katharine A. Bradley & PROUD Collaborative

doi : 10.1186/s13722-021-00249-3

Addiction Science & Clinical Practice volume 16, Article number: 46 (2021) 

Little is known about prevalence and treatment of OUD among youth engaged in primary care (PC). Medications are the recommended treatment of opioid use disorder (OUD) for adolescents and young adults (youth). This study describes the prevalence of OUD, the prevalence of medication treatment for OUD, and patient characteristics associated with OUD treatment among youth engaged in PC.

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Effects of morbidity on smoking cessation: a national smoking cessation program

Young-Gyun Seo, Min-Woo Jo, Yu-Jin Paek & Jaekyung Choi

doi : 10.1186/s13722-021-00257-3

Addiction Science & Clinical Practice volume 16, Article number: 47 (2021) 

In smokers with chronic diseases, we examined the abstinence rates over 6 months and its affecting factors in the context of the Korea National Health Insurance Service (NHIS) smoking cessation program.

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“At least someone thinks I’m doing well”: a real-world evaluation of the quit-smoking app StopCoach for lower socio-economic status smokers

Eline Meijer, Janneke S. Korst, Kristiene G. Oosting, Eline Heemskerk, Sander Hermsen, Marc C. Willemsen, Bas van den Putte, Niels H. Chavannes & Jamie Brown

doi : 10.1186/s13722-021-00255-5

Addiction Science & Clinical Practice volume 16, Article number: 48 (2021) 

Smoking is more prevalent and persistent among lower socio-economic status (SES) compared with higher-SES groups, and contributes greatly to SES-based health inequities. Few interventions exist that effectively help lower-SES smokers quit. This study evaluated “De StopCoach”, a mobile phone delivered eHealth intervention targeted at lower-SES smokers based on the evidence-based StopAdvisor, in a real-world setting (five municipalities) in The Netherlands in 2019–2020.

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Protecting patients and staff in residential treatment centers during exposure to COVID-19: commentary

Kimberly A. Johnson, Carolyn Keough, Holly Hills, Wouter Vermeer, Rebecca Lengnick-Hall, Moira McNulty, Mark McGovern & Hendricks Brown

doi : 10.1186/s13722-021-00258-2

Addiction Science & Clinical Practice volume 16, Article number: 49 (2021) 

The COVID-19 pandemic has created a crisis in access to addiction treatment. Programs with residential components have been particularly impacted as they try to keep infection from spreading in facilities and contributing to further community spread of the virus. This crisis highlights the ongoing daily trade-offs that organizations must weigh as they balance the risks and benefits of individual patients with those of the group of patients, staff and the community they serve.

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