Accelerate the Development of New MAT/MAR Approaches
Introductory Paragraph
The role of medications in helping people with Substance Use Disorders is significant. It is logical to think that all the potential options of Medication-Assisted Treatments (MAT) have not yet been discovered and researched. Rather than just limit our thinking to those that have been discovered and researched, a comprehensive strategy should include efforts to expand innovation and research to add new MAT options to the toolkit for helping people.
FDA is loosening the standards to speed the development of new practices to the market.[1]
Key Information
The Value of MAT (or Opioid-Agonist Treatment) International addiction experts consider initial opioid-agonist treatment, or OAT, with no duration restrictions, the evidence-based standard of care for opioid-use disorder, the authors write online November 20, 2018, in Annals of Internal Medicine.[2] In California, where more people have been diagnosed with opioid disorder than in any other U.S. state, publicly funded treatment programs require patients to “fail” - twice - at a three-week course of medically supervised withdrawal before they become eligible for OAT. Policymakers likely maintained this medically managed withdrawal requirement under the belief it was saving money. The study demonstrates, however, that the policy creates significantly greater long-term costs for criminal justice and healthcare systems. The study concludes OAT would have saved as much as $850 million over five years, not including savings to the criminal justice system, and more than $2 billion, including the cost of arrests and prosecutions. Over 10 years, the total savings would rise to $2.87 billion.[3] “In order to see overdose deaths come down, we need to make sure people who have opioid addiction are able to access effective treatment more easily than they can access heroin, fentanyl or pain pills." "We need a model whereby patients can get immediate access to opioid-agonist treatment, a lifesaving intervention, without obstacles." “Among experts in the field of addiction, we already know that detox doesn’t work, that they’re going to relapse and when they relapse, they’re going to be at great risk for an overdose, that they’ll be at great risk for hepatitis,” Kolodny said. “Opioid addiction is a life-threatening illness."[4]
Relevant Research
In this section, please capture any recent findings, reports, or data on the topic. Please also highlight any gaps or existing disparities. Please include references and links to the information so that we may add a footnote for the reader to find further information. Do we have any available research about discriminatory practices? Is there information about the value of access to educational opportunities?
Impactful Federal, State, and Local Policies
Please list any federal, state, or local laws, policies, or regulations that support this topic or ones that could be a possible barrier. Are there laws or policies other states should know about and replicate for success?
Available Tools and Resources
Oftentimes, there are already great resources in the field that have been developed, but they are not housed in a single place. Please use this section to share information about those resources and drive the reader to that resource. It may be a worksheet, toolkit, fact sheet, framework/model, infographic, new technology, etc. I suggest no more than 5 really good links and a corresponding description for the reader. We also can use this section to highlight some of the great resources and programs at SAFE Project.
Promising Practices
The Sinclair Method
The Sinclair Method[5] has shown significant success in helping people achieve long-lasting success over alcoholism. This approach focuses on retraining the brain to reduce or eliminate the cravings that people have by having them take Naltrexone before drinking so their brain learns that alcohol no longer provides the effect it previously did, and the cravings dissipate. The Sinclair Method has been very effective in helping people recover from alcoholism (with claims up 80% success rates), and it is the standard approach to treating alcoholism in Finland. More information is needed on whether this approach has been shown to be effective in helping people with Opioid Use Disorder (OUD). The 3-C Foundation[6] provides resources on this approach for dealing with alcoholism.
One topic that needs research but could be very powerful is to use an approach similar to the Sinclair Method that seems to have a high track record of success to help break people's cravings for opioid drugs. Here are some articles on the Sinclair Method as a way to treat alcohol addiction.[7][8]
Universities
Specific universities and colleges have centers and professors that focus on research in the area of addiction and treatment
University of Michigan Addiction Center (UMAC)[9]
University of Virginia: Center of Leading Edge Addiction Research[10]
Sources
- ↑ https://www.healthaffairs.org/do/10.1377/hblog20180320.58853/full/
- ↑ https://education.psychiatry.org/diweb/catalog/item?id=5913605&_ga=2.63318255.1744877395.1635561868-1008822590.1635561868
- ↑ https://doi.org/10.7326/M17-0611
- ↑ https://www.psychcongress.com/node/721
- ↑ https://www.the-sinclair-method.com/
- ↑ http://www.cthreefoundation.org/home.html
- ↑ https://www.the-sinclair-method.com/
- ↑ https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/overcoming-addiction/201307/drink-your-way-sober-naltrexone
- ↑ [https://medicine.umich.edu/dept/psychiatry/programs/addiction-center
- ↑ https://med.virginia.edu/uva-clear/