(Press-News.org) Medication-assisted treatment (MAT), such as naltrexone, is a well-documented successful treatment for opioid use disorder (OUD). However, there are multiple barriers for clinicians to use MAT, including clinician lack of confidence in using the treatment, their own misconceptions about the patient population, and, until recently, federally required training. Additionally, there is a stigma associated with MAT and the patients who would most benefit from it. Improving access to MAT training and integrating it into clinician programs and curriculums may remove identified barriers, decrease stigma, and enable newly trained clinicians to treat patients.
To address these barriers, Professor and interim Director of the School of Nursing Cheryl Oetjen, the principal investigator, and Associate Professor Kyeung Mi Oh led the implementation of integrating MAT training into Mason’s Master of Science and Doctor of Nursing Practice nurse practitioner curriculum and evaluated its quality and impact. They found that MAT training reduced bias and stigma associated with MAT. The training improved graduate students’ attitudes toward people with OUD and students’ desire to pursue being an OUD MAT provider after graduation.
“The continued assessment and curriculum development of MAT training in nursing programs is crucial in fighting the opioid overdose epidemic. By providing nursing graduate students with this opportunity, we are increasing the number of clinicians interested in providing MAT, which contributes to improving access for underserved patients seeking MAT treatment with an increase in available providers,” said Oh.
Most students were satisfied with the training and felt the training was effective in integrating new knowledge related to MAT. The training included immersion into practice and integration of treatment for OUD. Researchers believe what they have learned can be beneficial to other nursing programs.
Feedback on the training program was obtained through required Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) surveys and focus groups after training sessions to assess the quality of training, materials, instruction, and impact and usefulness of training.
Medication-assisted treatment 24-hr waiver training for opioid use disorder: Lessons learned was published online in the Journal of American Association of Nurse Practitioners in May 2023. Assistant Professor Megan S. Harvey, PhD in Nursing student Krista Beran, and DNP student Myriame Zamilus-Osabu were part of the research team. This research was funded by the SAMHSA.
END
Reducing bias and stigma associated with medication-assisted treatment improves care
Mason College of Public Health faculty integrated MAT training into Mason’s MSN and DNP curriculum in order to increase the number of clinicians who deliver MAT care.
2023-06-21
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
UNM researchers find medical cannabis patients who feel 'high' report greater symptom relief but increased negative side effects
2023-06-21
In a new study titled, “Understanding Feeling ‘High’ and Its Role in Medical Cannabis Patient Outcomes,” published in the journal, Frontiers in Pharmacology, researchers at The University of New Mexico, in collaboration with Releaf App™ found that patients who reported feeling “High” experienced 7.7% greater symptom relief and an increase in reporting of positive side effects such as “Relaxed” and “Peaceful.” However, these benefits must be weighed against a more than 20% increase in negative side effect reporting.
Senior author and Associate Professor of Psychology, ...
Screening newborns for "bubble-baby" disease saves lives
2023-06-21
Screening newborns for severe combined immunodeficiency disease (SCID) significantly increases the survival of children after bone marrow transplantation, a new North American study finds.
Published today in The Lancet with an accompanying editorial, the retrospective study was co-led by Elie Haddad, an Université de Montréal medical professor and clinician scientist, pediatrician and immunologist at the UdeM-affiliated CHU Sainte-Justine mother-and-child hospital.
The research shows that the gradual adoption of newborn screening for SCID since 2008 in North America has boosted the survival rate from 73 per cent between 1982 and 2009 to ...
Rain gardens could save salmon from toxic tire chemicals
2023-06-21
Specially designed gardens could reduce the amount of a toxic chemical associated with tires entering our waterways by more than 90 per cent, new research shows.
Tired toxins
The chemical 6PPD-quinone can form when car tires interact with the atmosphere. It enters rivers and streams when rain runs off roads into waterways. It is toxic to coho salmon, rainbow trout and some other fish.
“Rain gardens”, or bioretention cells, are gardens engineered to reduce flooding and soak up contaminants when road runoff is directed ...
New MU study examines variability of water, carbon in Missouri agriculture ecosystems and future impact on crops
2023-06-21
One of the main reasons plants use water is to allow them to absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. This means that, in plants, the water and carbon cycles are tightly linked. In a new study, researchers from the University of Missouri and the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) used this foundational principle to identify sustainable farming practices aimed at helping staple crops like corn and soybeans thrive during extreme weather conditions that have become more common in the Midwest.
This study examined how farming practices affect crop resilience to climate change by examining water and carbon ...
Welcoming two new journals to the PLOS portfolio: PLOS Mental Health and PLOS Complex Systems
2023-06-21
SAN FRANCISCO — PLOS today is announcing that it will soon launch two new journals: PLOS Mental Health and PLOS Complex Systems. PLOS sees these new journals as an opportunity to give evolving research communities opportunities to forge a new path for research in the field. Whether that means welcoming new ways of sharing research transparently or cementing new policies that enable research to be evaluated and rewarded more fairly, or simply finding a broader audience where research can make a greater real-world impact.
PLOS Mental Health provides a dedicated venue for all mental health research, connecting global experts from a broad range of disciplines and addressing challenges ...
A new, promising weapon in the fight against HIV
2023-06-21
A research team led by Tokyo Medical and Dental University (TMDU) has identified a molecular compound that activates latent HIV-1 in cells, showing promise for HIV treatments
Tokyo, Japan – A multi-institutional research group led by researchers from Tokyo Medical and Dental University (TMDU) has made a significant and promising step forward in our ability to treat human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1), the virus underlying acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS).
To appreciate their accomplishment, we must first know a little about why HIV-1 is difficult to eliminate. ...
A roadmap for gene regulation in plants
2023-06-21
– By Will Ferguson
For the first time, researchers at the Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) have developed a genome-scale way to map the regulatory role of transcription factors, proteins that play a key role in gene expression and determining a plant’s physiological traits. Their work reveals unprecedented insights into gene regulatory networks and identifies a new library of DNA parts that can be used to optimize genetic engineering efforts in plants.
“Transcription factors regulate things like how plants grow, how much fruit they produce, ...
Cave excavation pushes back the clock on early human migration to Laos
2023-06-21
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Fifteen years of archaeological work in the Tam Pa Ling cave in northeastern Laos has yielded a reliable chronology of early human occupation of the site, scientists report in the journal Nature Communications. The team’s excavations through the layers of sediments and bones that gradually washed into the cave and were left untouched for tens of thousands of years reveals that humans lived in the area for at least 70,000 years – and likely even longer.
“When we first started excavating the cave, we never expected to find humans in that region,” said University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign anthropology professor Laura Shackelford, who led ...
New microcomb device advances photonic technology
2023-06-21
A new tool for generating microwave signals could help propel advances in wireless communication, imaging, atomic clocks, and more.
Frequency combs are photonic devices that produce many equally spaced laser lines, each locked to a specific frequency to produce a comb-like structure. They can be used to generate high-frequency, stable microwave signals and scientists have been attempting to miniaturize the approach so they can be used on microchips.
Scientists have been limited in their abilities to tune these microcombs at a rate to make them effective. But a team of researchers ...
Now, every biologist can use machine learning
2023-06-21
By Lindsay Brownell
(BOSTON) — The amount of data generated by scientists today is massive, thanks to the falling costs of sequencing technology and the increasing amount of available computing power. But parsing through all that data to uncover useful information is like searching for a molecular needle in a haystack. Machine learning (ML) and other artificial intelligence (AI) tools can dramatically speed up the process of data analysis, but most ML tools are difficult for non-ML experts to access and use. Recently, automated machine learning (AutoML) methods have been developed that can automate the design and deployment ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Industrial air pollution triggers ice formation in clouds, reducing cloud cover and boosting snowfall
Emerging alternatives to reduce animal testing show promise
Presenting Evo – a model for decoding and designing genetic sequences
Global plastic waste set to double by 2050, but new study offers blueprint for significant reductions
Industrial snow: Factories trigger local snowfall by freezing clouds
Backyard birds learn from their new neighbors when moving house
New study in Science finds that just four global policies could eliminate more than 90% of plastic waste and 30% of linked carbon emissions by 2050
Breakthrough in capturing 'hot' CO2 from industrial exhaust
New discovery enables gene therapy for muscular dystrophies, other disorders
Anti-anxiety and hallucination-like effects of psychedelics mediated by distinct neural circuits
How do microbiomes influence the study of life?
Plant roots change their growth pattern during ‘puberty’
Study outlines key role of national and EU policy to control emissions from German hydrogen economy
Beloved Disney classics convey an idealized image of fatherhood
Sensitive ceramics for soft robotics
Trends in hospitalizations and liver transplants associated with alcohol-induced liver disease
Spinal cord stimulation vs medical management for chronic back and leg pain
Engineered receptors help the immune system home in on cancer
How conflicting memories of sex and starvation compete to drive behavior
Scientists discover ‘entirely unanticipated’ role of protein netrin1 in spinal cord development
Novel SOURCE study examining development of early COPD in ages 30 to 55
NRL completes development of robotics capable of servicing satellites, enabling resilience for the U.S. space infrastructure
Clinical trial shows positive results for potential treatment to combat a challenging rare disease
New research shows relationship between heart shape and risk of cardiovascular disease
Increase in crisis coverage, but not the number of crisis news events
New study provides first evidence of African children with severe malaria experiencing partial resistance to world’s most powerful malaria drug
Texting abbreviations makes senders seem insincere, study finds
Living microbes discovered in Earth’s driest desert
Artemisinin partial resistance in Ugandan children with complicated malaria
When is a hole not a hole? Researchers investigate the mystery of 'latent pores'
[Press-News.org] Reducing bias and stigma associated with medication-assisted treatment improves careMason College of Public Health faculty integrated MAT training into Mason’s MSN and DNP curriculum in order to increase the number of clinicians who deliver MAT care.