Pilot program integrating outpatient opioid treatment within a rural primary care setting

Context: Canada is experiencing an opioid crisis. In rural areas, limited access to specialty addictions services, public transportation, and many of the social determinants of health create a unique set of challenges for people who use substances. Issue: The Rural Outpatient Opioid Treatment (...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ellen Buck-McFadyen, Sean Lee-Popham, Ashley White
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: James Cook University 2021-08-01
Series:Rural and Remote Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.rrh.org.au/journal/article/6413/
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spelling doaj-1f23f45c7b67474cabcc61c21c8749b02021-08-27T03:26:28ZengJames Cook UniversityRural and Remote Health1445-63542021-08-012110.22605/RRH6413Pilot program integrating outpatient opioid treatment within a rural primary care settingEllen Buck-McFadyen0Sean Lee-Popham1Ashley White2Trent/Fleming School of Nursing, Trent University, Peterborough, Ontario, CanadaBancroft Family Health Team, Bancroft, Ontario, CanadaBancroft Family Health Team, Bancroft, Ontario, Canada Context: Canada is experiencing an opioid crisis. In rural areas, limited access to specialty addictions services, public transportation, and many of the social determinants of health create a unique set of challenges for people who use substances. Issue: The Rural Outpatient Opioid Treatment (ROOT) program was created to bring some of the structure of an inpatient treatment program into a rural primary care setting in Ontario, Canada. The program uses a harm reduction approach to provide group recovery work, primary care, peer support, smoking cessation, opioid agonist therapy, screening and treatment for hepatitis C and HIV, and longitudinal follow-up. Sixteen participants have enrolled in three rounds of the ROOT program to date. Lessons learned: A program evaluation shows that opioid use decreased while use of other substances remained high, in particular methamphetamine use, which is increasing more broadly in the local area. Participants described feeling cared for and appreciated the 'seamless' nature of the multidisciplinary program, the peer support provided, and their new and expanded social networks. The rural context created both benefits and challenges for their substance use, recovery, and for community programming. In conclusion, the evaluation of this pilot program demonstrates that it is possible to successfully integrate an outpatient substance-use treatment program into rural primary care. https://www.rrh.org.au/journal/article/6413/addictions servicesCanadaharm reductionopioidsprimary caresubstance use.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ellen Buck-McFadyen
Sean Lee-Popham
Ashley White
spellingShingle Ellen Buck-McFadyen
Sean Lee-Popham
Ashley White
Pilot program integrating outpatient opioid treatment within a rural primary care setting
Rural and Remote Health
addictions services
Canada
harm reduction
opioids
primary care
substance use.
author_facet Ellen Buck-McFadyen
Sean Lee-Popham
Ashley White
author_sort Ellen Buck-McFadyen
title Pilot program integrating outpatient opioid treatment within a rural primary care setting
title_short Pilot program integrating outpatient opioid treatment within a rural primary care setting
title_full Pilot program integrating outpatient opioid treatment within a rural primary care setting
title_fullStr Pilot program integrating outpatient opioid treatment within a rural primary care setting
title_full_unstemmed Pilot program integrating outpatient opioid treatment within a rural primary care setting
title_sort pilot program integrating outpatient opioid treatment within a rural primary care setting
publisher James Cook University
series Rural and Remote Health
issn 1445-6354
publishDate 2021-08-01
description Context: Canada is experiencing an opioid crisis. In rural areas, limited access to specialty addictions services, public transportation, and many of the social determinants of health create a unique set of challenges for people who use substances. Issue: The Rural Outpatient Opioid Treatment (ROOT) program was created to bring some of the structure of an inpatient treatment program into a rural primary care setting in Ontario, Canada. The program uses a harm reduction approach to provide group recovery work, primary care, peer support, smoking cessation, opioid agonist therapy, screening and treatment for hepatitis C and HIV, and longitudinal follow-up. Sixteen participants have enrolled in three rounds of the ROOT program to date. Lessons learned: A program evaluation shows that opioid use decreased while use of other substances remained high, in particular methamphetamine use, which is increasing more broadly in the local area. Participants described feeling cared for and appreciated the 'seamless' nature of the multidisciplinary program, the peer support provided, and their new and expanded social networks. The rural context created both benefits and challenges for their substance use, recovery, and for community programming. In conclusion, the evaluation of this pilot program demonstrates that it is possible to successfully integrate an outpatient substance-use treatment program into rural primary care.
topic addictions services
Canada
harm reduction
opioids
primary care
substance use.
url https://www.rrh.org.au/journal/article/6413/
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