Table 3.
Population | Considerations | Approach |
---|---|---|
People who do not want MOUD | - Many SUD-related harms (e.g., infection, overdose) occur upstream from MOUD engagement |
- Welcome patients who are not interested in MOUD into OUD treatment programs - Normalize visits for harm reduction services and other health priorities - Build trust |
People recently incarcerated |
- Overdose death risk is 129× the general population in the first 2 weeks after incarceration105 - In spite of the right to health care, many carceral settings do not provide MOUD106 - Abrupt discontinuation of MOUD in carceral settings reduces reengagement107 |
- Ensure patients and supports have and know how to use naloxone22,108 - Outreach to local houses of corrections to facilitate post-release linkage - Offer to communicate with probation/parole officers if barriers to MOUD arise |
Youth |
- MOUD improves outcomes in youth and should be offered109,110 - SUD programs serving youth are often abstinence-based111 - Harm reduction and MOUD may be viewed as “condoning” substance use |
- Building, maintaining trust are very important for engagement - Offer non-traditional communication (e.g., texting) and flexibility - Educate families on benefits of MOUD, naloxone, and harm reduction strategies |
Couples |
- Patients may present as part of a sexual or non-sexual relationship - Residential programs may not allow couples to enroll together |
- Assess patients separately, ideally with different care teams - Set expectations around information sharing and screen for intimate partner violence individually before allowing partners into visits - Refer to couples/family counseling |
Parents |
- Parents with SUD experience structural barriers to treatment 112 - Parents often fear a punitive response when disclosing ongoing substance use |
- Discuss up front how providers will address ongoing substance use and mandates to assess children’s safety, noting that recurrence of substance use alone does not constitute child abuse/neglect - When reporting is required, involve the parent in the process for transparency - Discuss safe medication storage in a locked location out of reach of children - Ensure naloxone readily availability |
People who are pregnant |
- Time of increased motivation and stressors - Buprenorphine and methadone are standard of care and should be continued - Growing evidence that buprenorphine/naloxone does not need to be switched to buprenorphine mono product113 |
- Do not stop MOUD if a patient becomes pregnant114 - Expect a need for dose changes due to pregnancy physiology; the need for dose increases in pregnancy is not a marker of disease severity or stability115 - Coordinate with Family Medicine or Obstetrics to provide wrap around services for people with OUD during pregnancy |