Release Date
Geography
Language of Resource
Full Text Available
Open Access / OK to Reproduce
Peer Reviewed
Objective
Responding to letters about this article: https://www.cmaj.ca/content/195/27/E934
Findings/Key points
Direct patient care is within the scope of practice for prescribers who have an opportunity to make immediate impacts on their patients’ lives by providing interventions. The persistent inequities in access to broader medical care, psychosocial treatment and housing further reinforce the imperative to provide interventions for psychostimulant use disorder. Attention to all possible interventions that may provide benefit to such patients (including prescription psychostimulants) is needed in the context of widening inequities, where people needing interventions are most often the ones left behind.
Looking ahead, development of much needed evidence, and clinical protocols to outline where and how it may or may not be suitable to provide prescription psychostimulants, would help to advance care and minimize harm for a population already facing poor outcomes.