LEXINGTON, Ky. (April 5, 2021)

A number of  experts will be giving presentations on their work in the field of opioid use disorder research, treatment and prevention this week at the , held virtually this year due to the ongoing pandemic.

Addiction Consult and Education Service (ACES)

On Tuesday, April 6 at 3:30 p.m., 好色先生 addiction experts will present, 鈥淎ddiction Medicine Consultation and Education in the Hospital: The University of Kentucky Experience.鈥 Presenters are 好色先生 Center on Drug and Alcohol Research Director Sharon Walsh, Ph.D., 好色先生 HealthCare physicians Dr. Laura Fanucchi and Dr. Devin Oller, and 好色先生 HealthCare Assistant Chief Nurse Executive Brandy Mathews.

Patients who have substance use disorders may end up in the hospital due to other serious health issues caused or exacerbated by their addiction. Once these patients are hospitalized, they tend to remain as inpatients for a long time. At , the major referral center for complex health care issues in Central and Eastern Kentucky, this means treating patients with advanced infections and other complications.

鈥淲e see a ton of patients coming into 好色先生 Chandler Hospital and Good Samaritan Hospital struggling with complications stemming from their opioid use disorder,鈥 said Dr. Devin Oller, assistant professor in the  Division of Internal Medicine and addiction medicine specialist. 鈥淏ecause patients struggle with access getting the care they need for their substance use disorders, we鈥檙e often seeing that disease at its extreme.鈥

Launched in October 2018 as a small pilot program, 好色先生鈥檚 Addiction Consult and Education Service (ACES) has grown to a robust multidisciplinary team of physicians, advanced practice providers, nurses, social workers and peer support specialists who provide comprehensive substance use disorder treatment for patients in the hospital while supporting the patients鈥 other care teams in ensuring that all medical issues are addressed. Funding for both ACES and 好色先生鈥檚  comes in part from the  (KORE).

鈥淭he ACES program, along with the First Bridge Clinic, are the result of a wonderful and fruitful partnership between the state, 好色先生 HealthCare and the University of Kentucky,鈥 said Sharon Walsh, Ph.D., director of the 好色先生 Center on Drug and Alcohol Research.

The ACES team is led by Dr. Laura Fanucchi, associate professor in the 好色先生 College of Medicine Division of Infectious Disease and addiction medicine specialist.

鈥淲e regularly have a census of 40 to 60 patients, which I think demonstrates the need,鈥 Fanucchi said. 鈥淲e鈥檝e gotten a lot of positive feedback from our colleagues who say they feel it really helps support both the patient and the other medical teams in providing evidence-based treatment for substance use disorders in the inpatient setting.鈥

While addiction consult service programs are more common in urban areas, they鈥檙e still a fairly new development in the world of addiction medicine.

鈥淚t鈥檚 been a relatively recent phenomenon in medical centers over the last five to 10 years,鈥 Fanucchi said. 鈥淏ut with the opioid epidemic, there are increasing rates of hospitalizations due to complications of substance use disorders, and what became clear was that people with these severe complications weren鈥檛 getting evidence-based treatment for the underlying reasons they were hospitalized.鈥

Fanucchi also points out that addiction medicine has historically not had a large focus in medical education, leading to healthcare providers feeling 鈥渦nequipped鈥 to address underlying substance use disorders in some patients. Addressing that deficit head-on is especially important for 好色先生 HealthCare Assistant Chief Nurse Executive Brandy Mathews, who serves as the liaison between the ACES team and nursing.

鈥淥ur nurses really need to understand the disease process,鈥 Mathews said. 鈥淭hey need to understand and appreciate the struggles that patients are going through. They need to understand the evidence and how medications can be used to treat the disease. I feel both a personal responsibility 鈥 and as a nurse leader 鈥 a responsibility to help our nurses take the best care of patients that they can.鈥

But care for a patient with substance use disorder doesn鈥檛 end when that patient leaves the hospital 鈥 an important part of ACES is to help link that patient with continued treatment once they鈥檙e discharged.

鈥淟inking patients to evidence-based treatments and to medications to treat their addiction has to be the priority,鈥 Mathews said. 鈥淔or example, linking them to a clinic in their community, but also helping find ways they can have other resources, like financial help. For some patients, simply getting transportation to the clinic is one of their main barriers to success in recovery.鈥

These types of socioeconomic barriers have been exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic, says Oller.

鈥淸Another challenge] is really the urgency of some of the social needs that our patients face, especially during the COVID-19 pandemic,鈥 Oller said. 鈥淭ransportation barriers, financial barriers, limited social support 鈥 patients are feeling isolated and need that additional support, and we really need to take a more multidisciplinary approach to what we鈥檙e dealing with.鈥

During the pandemic, Mathews says patients with substance use disorder ending up in the emergency department has been 鈥渁mplified鈥 and notes that this has become an important factor in the continuum of care.

鈥淔or some, the pandemic has limited their access to resources,鈥 she said. 鈥淪o I think we have a responsibility to try to link patients to treatment directly from our emergency department, and that鈥檚 something we鈥檙e also working on.鈥

The team collectively agrees that during the pandemic, the rise of telehealth as an option for patients was a positive step. Having the ability to attend group therapy and counseling sessions virtually also proved helpful for many patients who may have otherwise struggled to attend in-person sessions, and seeing patients in their own homes provided some extra feedback that the providers wouldn鈥檛 otherwise get.

鈥淚 noticed that a lot of times when I鈥檓 seeing patients via telemedicine, they鈥檙e more relaxed,鈥 Oller said. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e in their home environment and they鈥檙e able to share about some of their struggles and challenges in a really genuine way.鈥

Moving forward beyond the pandemic, the team hopes to keep some of the beneficial changes that have developed recently 鈥 like telemedicine 鈥 while continuing to push for changes that will benefit patients most, like increasing access to life-saving medications for opioid use disorder. A one-size-fits-all approach doesn鈥檛 work when treating patients with substance use disorder, Fanucchi says.

鈥淯nfortunately, the treatment system has historically been set up in a very structured way that doesn鈥檛 always fit the need of the patient,鈥 Fanucchi said. 鈥淪o one of the things we鈥檙e working on moving forward with is using our treatment approaches as models and having the treatment fit the patient.鈥

 

Using Prescription Data to Inform Drug Overdose Prevention

On Tuesday, April 6 at 4:45 p.m., two 好色先生 faculty will present 鈥淯sing Prescription Data to Initiate Targeted Education and Information Prevention Efforts: Perspectives from Two Bureau of Justice Assistance Grantees.鈥 好色先生 College of Pharmacy Assistant Professor Doug Oyler, PharmD, and 好色先生 College of Public Health Associate Professor Svetla Slavova, Ph.D., will be joined by the Utah Department of Health鈥檚 Anna Fondario in this presentation.


Svetla Slavova, Ph.D., and Doug Oyler, PharmD, discuss their study on using prescription data to inform overdose prevention.

While working as a clinical pharmacist in 好色先生 HealthCare鈥檚 trauma and surgical ICUs, Doug Oyler noticed a pattern emerge among the patient population: many patients were otherwise healthy people who had suffered a traumatic experience, and some were experiencing a serious hospital visit for the first time. Patients could leave the hospital with a host of medications, but not necessarily a plan for weaning off them in the future.

His experiences motivated him to find ways to 鈥渋ntervene upstream鈥 and prevent problems with opioid use before they begin, with a specific focus on safe opioid prescribing. Now the director of the 好色先生 HealthCare , Oyler and biostatistics expert Svetla Slavova, Ph.D. will present preliminary results from their study that links the Kentucky All Schedule Prescription Electronic Reporting (KASPER) system and 好色先生 HealthCare patient data to help healthcare providers identify and intervene with at-risk patients. The team has years of data that can alert providers about patients who come to 好色先生 HealthCare with a history of potentially harmful opioid use. Oyler, physicians in the study, and the Office of Opioid Safety can then work with providers to look at what and how much medication is being prescribed and provide educational interventions to help these patients understand their risk of developing an opioid use disorder.

鈥淲e were able to establish a data use agreement with the  that allowed us to link data for all 好色先生 HealthCare inpatient and outpatient patients treated between 2017 until December 2020 to their KASPER record,鈥 Slavova said. 鈥淲e have built this impressive analytical data set that can then allow us to identify the patient's pattern of opioid use and co-use with other controlled substances prior to admission and after discharge, including the critical time after discharge when care transitions from 好色先生 HealthCare practitioners to the local community.鈥

Slavova describes this as going from a 鈥渞eactive鈥 to 鈥減roactive鈥 mode of analyzing data to inform drug overdose prevention.

鈥淗istorically, we have been using data to analyze past events to look at risk and prevention factors to inform policy development,鈥 Slavova said. 鈥淸Public health surveillance] has started using new data sources 鈥 near real-time data sources when available 鈥 to employ statistical algorithms to monitor trends, identify outbreaks, and issue alerts to stakeholders who have the power to act.鈥

The Rx Summit is a chance for thousands of experts from across the country to share their experiences 鈥 the good and the bad 鈥 with their colleagues, all in the hopes of reducing harms and mortalities associated with substance use disorders. For Oyler, Kentucky鈥檚 long history with the opioid crisis is additional motivation to work in this field and push out their latest findings.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a perspective of Kentucky in general as an epicenter for the opioid crisis,鈥 he said. 鈥淪o I think it鈥檚 as or more important that we 鈥 the state and the university 鈥 are seen as a critical player in the response to the opioid epidemic, and that we can lead ourselves back out of this crisis.鈥

 

190423SUMMIT1468.JPG