Implementing treatment of opioid use disorder in rural settings: A focus on HIV and Hepatitis C prevention and treatment

Lit review
by
Havens, Jennifer R. et al

Release Date

2018

Geography

USA

Language of Resource

English

Open Access / OK to Reproduce

No

Peer Reviewed

Yes

Objective

To describe the epidemiology opioid use disorder in the rural United States as it pertains to HIV and hepatitis C transmission and treatment resources.

Findings/Key points

Heroin and fentanyl analogues have surpassed prescription opioids in their availability in rural opioid markets adding to HIV and hepatitis C (HCV) and overdose risks. Only 18% of rural individuals live in towns with inpatient services which are of limited quality and utiity. Opioid treatment programs that provide methadone are not located in rural areas and only 3% of the primary care providers have the ability to prescribe buprenorphine. National models and resources have been established but lack implementation in rural areas leading to ongoing HIV and HCV transmission and overdose

Keywords

Overdose
Equity
Barriers and enablers
Rural/remote
Substitution/OAT