Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12188/31079
Title: Opioid Agonist Maintenance Treatment Outcomes—The OPTIMUS International Consensus Towards Evidence-Based and Patient-Centred Care, an Interim Report
Authors: Lucas Wiessing
Prakashini Banka-Cullen
M. Gabriela Barbaglia
Vendula Belackova
Saed A. S. Belbaisi
Peter Blanken
Patrizia Carrieri
Catherine Comiskey
Daniel Dacosta-Sánchez
Geert Dom
Venus Fabricius
Hugo Faria
Liljana Ignjatova 
Nemanja Inić
Britta Jacobsen
Jana D. Javakhishvili
Zuzana Kamendy
Máté Kapitány-Fövény
Anna Kiss
Evi Kyprianou
Kirsten Marchand
Tim Millar
Viktor Mravcik
Naser J. Y. Mustafa
Carlos Nordt
Markus Partanen
Mads Uffe Pedersen
Hanna Putkonen
Mariam Razmadze
Perrine Roux
Bernd Schulte
Paulo Seabra
Luis Sordo
Lisa Strada
Emilis Subata
Esmeralda Thoma
Marta Torrens
Alexander Y. Walley
Ioanna Yiasemi
Issue Date: 26-Dec-2023
Publisher: Springer
Source: Wiessing, L., Banka-Cullen, P., Barbaglia, M.G. et al. Opioid Agonist Maintenance Treatment Outcomes—The OPTIMUS International Consensus Towards Evidence-Based and Patient-Centred Care, an Interim Report. Int J Ment Health Addiction (2023). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11469-023-01213-9
Journal: International Journal of Mental Health and Addiction
Abstract: Non-medical opioid use is a major public health concern causing high mortality. While opioid agonist maintenance treatment (OMT) is a key life-saving intervention, there is (a) no international consensus on opioid treatment outcomes and (b) few opioid treatment outcome studies include key (public) health outcomes, such as overdose or HIV/hepatitis C. We report the rationale and study protocol for, and preliminary results of, an on-going international OMT outcomes consensus study that aims to address this double gap (n = 110 collaborating experts from 32 countries, plus a n = 477 Delphi evaluation panel from 26 of those countries: 58% male, 41% female; 47% OMT patients, 53% OMT professionals). We present a first draft of a patient interview guide (including a ‘clinical form’) to monitor OMT outcomes in six domains. The form appears to be well accepted and feasible in early testing. Through this, we aim to enhance the quality of and access to OMT and improve the survival, health, and quality of life of people who use opioids, while promoting non-stigmatising patient-physician relationships.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12188/31079
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11469-023-01213-9
Appears in Collections:Faculty of Medicine: Journal Articles

Show full item record

Page view(s)

21
checked on Jul 25, 2024

Google ScholarTM

Check

Altmetric


Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.