A new study from Yale School of Medicine explores how racial and ethnic factors influence access to opioid use disorder (OUD) treatment after emergency department (ED) visits.
The research, published in JAMA Network Open on July 14, highlights how important EDs are in linking patients to life-saving addiction care and also suggests ways to improve treatment equity through targeted interventions.
"The emergency department truly serves as a hub for access to life-saving addiction treatment, particularly for individuals who may not receive care through more traditional settings, such as in a doctor’s office," says lead author Edouard Coupet Jr., MD, assistant professor of emergency medicine at Yale School of Medicine (YSM) and core faculty in the Yale Program of Addiction Medicine.
The patients included in the study were part of a large multi-site trial funded by the National Institute on Drug Abuse’s (NIDA's) Clinical Trial Network. The study enrolled 1,994 patients with OUD in 29 sites across the United States. It compared the effects that two treatments—a traditional under-the-tongue form of buprenorphine and a new seven-day, extended-release injectable formulation—had on patient engagement in addiction treatment at seven and 30 days.