Abstract

BackgroundDuring public health emergencies, people with opioid use disorder (PWOUD) may be particularly impacted. Emergent disasters such as the COVID-19 pandemic disrupt already-strained harm reduction efforts and treatment availability. This study aims to answer three research questions. How do public health emergencies impact PWOUD? How can health systems respond to novel public health emergencies to serve PWOUD? How can the results of this scoping review be contextualized to the province of Alberta to inform local stakeholder responses to the pandemic?MethodsWe conducted a scoping review using the 6-stage Arksey and O’Malley framework to analyse early-pandemic and pre-pandemic disaster literature. The results of the scoping review were contextualized to the local pandemic response, through a Nominal Group Technique (NGT) process with frontline providers and stakeholders in Alberta, Canada.ResultsSixty one scientific journal articles and 72 grey literature resources were included after full-text screening. Forty sources pertained to early COVID-19 responses, and 21 focused on OUD treatment during other disasters. PWOUD may be more impacted than the general population by common COVID-19 stressors including loss of income, isolation, lack of rewarding activities, housing instability, as well as fear and anxiety. They may also face unique challenges including threats to drug supplies, stigma, difficulty accessing clean substance use supplies, and closure of substance use treatment centres. All of these impacts put PWOUD at risk of negative outcomes including fatal overdose. Two NGT groups were held. One group (n = 7) represented voices from urban services, and the other (n = 4) Indigenous contexts. Stakeholders suggested that simultaneous attention to multiple crises, with adequate resources to allow attention to both social and health systems issues, can prepare a system to serve PWOUD during disasters.ConclusionThis scoping review and NGT study uncovers how disasters impact PWOUD and offers suggestions for better serving PWOUD.

Highlights

  • During public health emergencies, people with opioid use disorder (PWOUD) may be impacted

  • How do public health emergencies impact PWOUD? How can health systems quickly respond to novel public health emergencies to serve PWOUD? How can the results of this scoping review be contextualized to the province of Alberta to inform local stakeholder responses to the pandemic?

  • Forty sources pertained to early COVID-19 responses, 12 focused on Opioid Use Disorder (OUD) treatment during hurricanes and nine focused on OUD treatment during other disasters (e.g., 9/11, heatwaves, riots, earthquakes and disasters in general)

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Summary

Introduction

People with opioid use disorder (PWOUD) may be impacted. Emergent disasters such as the COVID-19 pandemic disrupt already-strained harm reduction efforts and treatment availability. How can health systems respond to novel public health emergencies to serve PWOUD? When COVID-19 was declared a global public health emergency by the World Health Organization in March 2020, the opioid crisis was already impacting communities across Canada. Public health documents highlighted that PWOUD may have more severe outcomes if infected with COVID-19, due to poorer baseline health and increased risk of transmission due to social inequities [1]. How can health systems quickly respond to novel public health emergencies to serve PWOUD? How do public health emergencies impact PWOUD? How can health systems quickly respond to novel public health emergencies to serve PWOUD? How can the results of this scoping review be contextualized to the province of Alberta to inform local stakeholder responses to the pandemic?

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