Influence of social vulnerability on buprenorphine treatment and opioid overdoses after an opioid-related emergency department visit among commercially insured and Medicare Advantage beneficiaries
Univ Of North Carolina Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill NC
Investigators
Abstract
PROJECT SUMMARY/ABSTRACT Opioid overdoses continue to increase and disproportionately influence people experiencing greater social risk factors. Buprenorphine is a first-line treatment for opioid use disorder (OUD) that decreases opioid overdoses, especially when initiated in the emergency department (ED)â a high volume point-of-care. However, buprenorphine treatment inequities exist in and outside of the ED, and methodological challenges make it difficult to identify vulnerable populations with OUD who may benefit from improved access to, and quality of, buprenorphine treatment. The social vulnerability index (SVI), developed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), is a measure that identifies vulnerable populations by capturing social risk factors in a region that influence health. A composite score is derived based on an areaâs: 1) socioeconomic status; 2) household composition and disability; 3) minority status and language; 4) housing and transportation. Studies that examined the influence of area-level social risk factors on buprenorphine treatment and opioid overdoses were state specific or limited to county-level measures. No studies have examined the influence of social vulnerability on buprenorphine treatment and opioid overdoses following an opioid-related ED visit in people with OUD who have commercial or Medicare Advantage (aged and disabled) health insurance. This study will deploy the SVI at the residential zip-code level to investigate the influence of social vulnerability on buprenorphine treatment and opioid overdoses following an opioid-related ED visit using claims data (OptumLabs® Data Warehouse) from people with commercial or Medicare Advantage health insurance. Aim 1 will employ Cox hazard regression analysis to assess whether social vulnerability is associated with time to initiating buprenorphine treatment. Aim 2 will estimate the effect of social vulnerability on buprenorphine treatment retention for at least 180 days, as well as eight other buprenorphine treatment quality measures from the American Society of Addiction Medicine (ASAM), using generalized estimating equations (GEE). Aim 3 will estimate the effect of prescribing practices on opioid overdoses using GEE. The results from this study will serve as a model for future research and inform targeted policy and clinical levers that improve access to, and quality of, buprenorphine treatment, as well as opioid- related outcomes, among people with OUD experiencing greater social risk factors.
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