Friday, April 19, 2024

The case for supervised drug use

The ideas and innovators shaping health care
Apr 19, 2024 View in browser
 
Future Pulse

By Carmen Paun, Daniel Payne, Ruth Reader and Erin Schumaker

AROUND THE NATION

Sam Rivera (L), executive director of OnPoint NYC talks to a worker at the newly formed nonprofit that operates a overdose prevention center in the Harlem borough of New York on February 8, 2022. - "This site saves lives," reads an inscription on the wall of America's first drug injection center in New York, which is aiming to serve as a model in a country blighted by record overdoses.In the room, there are eight   open cubicles all equipped with a chair, a table and a mirror, the latter to quickly see "if anything goes wrong," says 29-year-old Mark, a regular visitor.Drug overdoses killed 2,062 people in New York alone in 2020, the height of the city's Covid-10 pandemic, with higher rates in poorer neighborhoods and Black communities.Fewer than 1,500 died in 2019 and fewer than 1,000 in 2015.Between April 2020 and April 2021, the United States recorded more than 100,000 drug deaths, a record for a 12-month period. (Photo by TIMOTHY A. CLARY / AFP) (Photo by TIMOTHY A. CLARY/AFP via Getty Images)

Sam Rivera (left), executive director of OnPoint NYC, talks to a worker at its overdose prevention center in Harlem in 2022. | AFP via Getty Images

Overdose prevention centers, where people with substance use disorder consume illicit drugs under supervision, keep people alive and prevent them from using drugs in public, those involved in a New York City program say.

Still, supervised drug use remains in a legal gray zone, holding back its widespread implementation, officials from the city’s Department of Health and Mental Hygiene and representatives of OnPoint NYC, which runs the sites, wrote in a study published in the NEJM Catalyst this week.

Why it matters: The U.S. has reported record levels of fatal overdoses in recent years, driven by illicit fentanyl, a powerful synthetic opioid.

New York City is no exception. More than 3,000 people died of an overdose in 2022, the highest number since the city started reporting such cases in 2000, according to the study authors.

Older New Yorkers, Black and Latino residents, people experiencing homelessness and residents of high-poverty neighborhoods are the most affected.

OnPoint NYC, a nonprofit, opened two overdose prevention sites in Washington Heights and East Harlem on Nov. 30, 2021. They are the first government-supported centers for supervised use of illicit substances in the U.S., the authors write.

New York City finances some services like prevention, risk reduction and counseling. But it doesn’t finance direct supervised consumption since it’s illegal. Private donations fund that service.

The results: In the year after the two sites opened, more than 2,800 people used their services some 48,500 times — a heavy usage rate, the authors write.

The users — mostly middle-aged Latino men — are homeless or have unstable housing. That, together with their higher exposure to the criminal justice system and a lack of resources, puts them at higher risk of an overdose than users in less precarious situations, according to the New York City health department and OnPoint representatives.

Staff had to intervene to reverse an overdose during about 1 percent of the visits — 636 — while emergency services were called just 23 times. That likely saved the city’s emergency health services money since the base cost per transport is estimated at around $900, according to the study authors.

No overdose deaths occurred at the sites.

Most participants reported during their visits that they would have otherwise used drugs in public, which can increase the risk of a fatal overdose or lead to arrests and pushback from people in the area. Visits to overdose prevention centers avoided nearly 40,000 instances of public drug use and potentially nearly 20,000 syringes being improperly discarded, wrote the city health department and OnPoint representatives.

Most visitors also accessed meals, laundry and medical services through OnPoint.

What’s next? Despite the benefits the proponents found for people at risk of a fatal overdose and communities, the sites typically can’t receive public funding. They’re also hampered by legal barriers and stigma from the community toward such sites and their users.

The federal government is funding a study on the centers over the next three years.

 

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DIAGNOSIS

Doctor Judah Eastwell a GP at St Johns Medical Centre, consults a patient via a video link to their home

More medical specialists are looking at how they use telehealth. | Christopher Furlong/Getty Images

Telehealth is increasingly common for primary care — but the technology is also coming around to the world of specialty care.

Included Health, a provider that touts its tech-enabled clinical, administrative and financial offerings to patients, announced its virtual-first Specialty Care Clinic this week.

The clinic will launch with three offerings aimed at cancer, obesity and menopause.

Why go virtual? “The way things are today is not working,” Dr. Ami Parekh, the company’s chief health officer, told Daniel.

She pointed to wait times and fragmentation among the providers treating a patient as challenges to the current approach to specialty care.

And the upsides, the company argues, include lower costs and higher patient satisfaction, partly by integrating nearly all of a patient’s care and offering providers more information on the patient’s case.

Even so: Don’t expect every specialty care provider to create similar offerings, Parekh said.

The ability to create virtual options nationwide is related to scale, she said, noting that her company has clinicians with licenses to practice in all 50 states.

What’s needed from Washington? Parekh said policymakers should consider how leveraging technology could improve health care and prioritize regulating emerging technology, such as artificial intelligence, so that it can take root.

“You really have to keep an open mind as a policymaker,” she said. “People want to receive care this way.”

 

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CHECKUP

SEELOW, BRANDENBURG - AUGUST 08:  Country doctor Dieter Baermann writes details in a laptop in the patient's home on August 8, 2011 in Sachsendorf near Seelow, Germany. Baermann works in the state of Brandenburg in eastern Germany, a region that is struggling with a shortage of doctors in rural areas. Critics charge that current laws actually discourage doctors from taking up posts in rural areas, and   the German government is debating a new law intended to reverse the trend. Many doctors across Germany complain about a legal system that they claim burdens them with too many costs and hampers their ability to provide the best care.  (Photo by Carsten Koall/Getty Images)

Doctors can benefit from AI note-taking tools even if they don't save them time, a study found. | Getty Images

AI could help doctors be more empathetic in their written correspondence with patients, but it’s not saving them time.

That’s what researchers from UC San Diego Health found after implementing a pilot program in which an artificial intelligence tool drafted messages before doctors edited them.

Despite the mixed results, the authors of the study, published in JAMA Network Open, suggested that using AI to draft messages could lessen doctors’ mental load and potentially lead to higher-quality responses.

“Our physicians receive about 200 messages a week,” Ming Tai-Seale, one of the study’s authors, said in a statement about the research. “AI could help break ‘writer’s block’ by providing physicians an empathy-infused draft upon which to craft thoughtful responses to patients.”

Elsewhere: Other health systems conducting pilots with similar tools have found efficiencies associated with their use. Leaders at Providence hospitals, for example, said doctor response times were cut in half when AI was integrated into their systems.

 

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