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Public libraries nationwide are facing an on-premise opioid overdose crisis. Many persons with opioid use disorder (OUD) remained unhoused and profoundly hard to reach. This study innovatively develops and tests a telemedicine intervention delivered through public libraries to increase unstably housed individuals' access to bupe treatment that would prevent overdoses from occurring in the first place. The investigators will conduct a 12-week pilot 2-arm randomized controlled trial (RCT) (n=40). Research staff will recruit library patrons and randomize them to weekly telehealth at the library or in-person clinic control arms across two participating libraries in San Diego.
Full description
Libraries have become places of refuge for unstably housed individuals with OUD. "Two overdoses a day" occurred just outside the library, according to focus group participants in the investigator's 2019 study on Homelessness in Public Spaces: An Assessment at the San Diego Central Library. Libraries have already taken extraordinary measures to help unstably housed patrons with OUD. The San Diego Central Library trained security staff to carry Narcan to save patrons who overdose in their bathrooms. To deal with daily patron mental health crises, libraries now have social workers, nurses, and peer homeless outreach staff on-site. Buprenorphine "bupe" is a highly effective medical treatment for OUD. However, the investigator's preliminary work shows that unstably housed persons with OUD at libraries perceive lack of bupe access due to transportation and medical coverage issues as barriers to treatment.
"Bupe by the Book" (BBB), in collaboration with the investigators' established local partners, San Diego Public Libraries and Father Joe's Village Health Center (FJV), will innovatively adapt FJV's already successful same-day, free tele-bupe treatment to library settings where OUD patrons are already. BBB will be a groundbreaking 12-week intervention that leverages the library's resources to facilitate low-barrier tele-bupe care via local clinic providers without requiring access to a clinic. By testing BBB uptake and retention in libraries, this study will inform how unstably housed persons and others can receive bupe care in innovative ways with minimal clinical/non-clinical requirements (e.g., low-barrier induction), changing the landscape radically for implementing bupe.
Using a mixed methods approach, the study combines qualitative and quantitative methodologies to address three specific aims:
In line with NIDA's 2020 Strategic Plan (Objective 3.4. Develop and test strategies for effectively and sustainably implementing evidence-based treatments), the proposed study addresses long-standing barriers to bupe uptake/adherence. By utilizing multiple library sites, the investigators will render tele-bupe reproducible for other libraries nationwide facing opioid overdoses. This work will pave the foundation for a larger RCT in a subsequent R01 to evaluate the efficacy of utilizing public settings to treat substance use disorders and reduce opioid-related deaths.
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60 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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