Author: Manzardo, Ann M; Sethi, Roopa
Title: Covid19 impact screening of patients undergoing medication treatment for opioid use disorder. Cord-id: tj60b7ev Document date: 2021_4_2
ID: tj60b7ev
Snippet: BACKGROUND Populations with addiction are considered at-risk for both medical and financial effects of the COVID19 outbreak. Patients receiving medication treatment for opioid use disorder (MOUD) were screened to assess need, vulnerability factors and potential clinical impact of the pandemic for referral and allocation of resources. Methods: A 31-item quality improvement survey of COVID19-related factors (e.g. engagement in social distancing, food and financial security) and clinical benchmarks
Document: BACKGROUND Populations with addiction are considered at-risk for both medical and financial effects of the COVID19 outbreak. Patients receiving medication treatment for opioid use disorder (MOUD) were screened to assess need, vulnerability factors and potential clinical impact of the pandemic for referral and allocation of resources. Methods: A 31-item quality improvement survey of COVID19-related factors (e.g. engagement in social distancing, food and financial security) and clinical benchmarks of anxiety, craving, and treatment response was administered between March 24 and April 29, 2020. Anonymized data were compiled for study. Frequencies and means were evaluated for gender, age and financial effects on anxiety and craving ratings. Results: A total of 200 (N = 117 male; N = 80 female; N = 1 transgender) patients (age 42 ± 13 years) were screened. Medical risk factors known to predict severe COVID19 reactions reported in 33% of patients did not contribute significantly to distress. While 95% of patients reported stable food and housing, personal financial and employment instability reported in 40% of patients was associated with significantly increased anxiety and craving rating, particularly for women. Conclusions: Financial ramifications of the COVID19 pandemic were the most salient concerns reported by patients engaged in MOUD in the early phases of the outbreak, particularly for women.
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