Take-home methadone maintenance treatment associated with decreased hospital admissions
2012-06-15
(Press-News.org) (Boston) – A recent study conducted by researchers at Boston Medical Center (BMC) shows that patients receiving "take home" methadone maintenance treatment (MMT) were less likely to be admitted to the hospital as compared to those not receiving take home doses. The findings, which are published online in the Journal of Addiction Medicine, demonstrate the potential benefits of successful addiction treatment, including better overall health and decreased health care utilization.
This research was led by Alexander Walley, MD, MSc, physician in general internal medicine at BMC and medical director of the Opioid Treatment Program at the Boston Public Health Commission. Daniel Alford, MD, MPH, medical director of the Office-based Opioid Treatment (OBOT) at BMC and associate professor of medicine at Boston University School of Medicine (BUSM), and Jeffrey Samet, MD, MA, MPH, chief of general internal medicine at BMC and professor of medicine and community health sciences at BUSM and Boston University School of Public Health, respectively, were the study's senior co-authors.
Among people addicted to opioids, methadone maintenance treatment prevents symptoms of withdrawal, blocks the effects of illicit opioids, like heroin, and reduces cravings. Methadone dosing is individualized and research has found that doses greater than 80 milligrams are more effective than lower doses in curbing cravings.
Federal and state regulations require methadone maintenance patients to attend the clinic daily to receive medication at the beginning of treatment. Patients that exhibit treatment successes, including regular attendance at clinic and counseling sessions, as well passing urine screenings for illicit drug use, are rewarded with "take home" methadone doses. These patients receive medication that they may take at home instead of coming into the clinic. Previous studies have shown that receiving "take home" doses and receiving doses of 80 milligrams or more are associated with improved addiction treatment outcomes, but the impact of these factors on hospitalizations was unknown.
To explore these questions, the researchers performed a retrospective analysis of 138 patients enrolled in the Boston Public Health Commission's MMT program for a period of two years between 2006 and 2008. The results showed that patients receiving "take home" methadone doses were substantially less likely to be admitted to the hospital with 74 percent lower odds of hospitalization. The data also showed no evidence that the dose of methadone was associated with hospitalization.
"These study results add to the mounting evidence that patients who are successful in their addiction treatment are also improving their overall health, which could result in a reduction of health care utilization," said Walley, who also is an assistant professor of medicine at BUSM. "We have demonstrated an association between take home status and hospitalization, which is an important medical and health system cost outcome that needs to be considered as we further explore the benefits of addiction treatment to the patient and the health care system as a whole."
INFORMATION:
Funding for this study was provided in part by the National Institute on Drug Abuse under award number R25-DA13582 (Principal Investigator – Jeffrey Samet).
END
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2012-06-15
Nine out of 10 Californians under the age of 65 will be enrolled in health insurance programs as a result of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA), according to a joint study by the UC Berkeley Center for Labor Research and Education and the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research.
Between 1.8 million and 2.7 million previously uninsured Californians will gain coverage by 2019, when the law's effect is fully realized, the researchers said.
The report, which uses a sophisticated computer simulation model to project the ACA's impact on insurance coverage, ...
2012-06-15
PHILADELPHIA—It has long been known that cancer is a disease of aging, but a molecular link between the two has remained elusive.
Now, researchers at the Kimmel Cancer Center at Jefferson (KCC) have shown that senescence (aging cells which lose their ability to divide) and autophagy (self-eating or self-cannibalism) in the surrounding normal cells of a tumor are essentially two sides of the same coin, acting as "food" to fuel cancer cell growth and metastasis.
Michael P. Lisanti, M.D., Ph.D., Professor and Chair of Stem Cell Biology and Regenerative Medicine at Jefferson ...
2012-06-15
Ottawa, Ontario (June 14, 2012) – Most children and youth who consume soft drinks and other sweetened beverages, such as fruit punch and lemonade, are not at any higher risk for obesity than their peers who drink healthy beverages, says a new study published in the October issue of Applied Physiology, Nutrition, and Metabolism. The study examined the relationship between beverage intake patterns of Canadian children and their risk for obesity and found sweetened beverage intake to be a risk factor only in boys aged 6-11.
"We found sweetened drinks to be dominant beverages ...
2012-06-15
A grasshopper's change in diet to high-energy carbohydrates while being hunted by spiders may affect the way soil releases carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, according to Yale and Hebrew University researchers in Science.
Grasshoppers like to munch on nitrogen-rich grass because it stimulates their growth and reproduction. But when spiders enter the picture, grasshoppers cope with the stress from fear of predation by shifting to carbohydrate-rich plants, setting in motion dynamic changes to the ecosystem they inhabit.
"Under stressful conditions they go to different ...
2012-06-15
Jerusalem, June 14, 2012 – How do grasshoppers who are being frightened by spiders affect our ecosystem? In no small measure, say researchers at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and at Yale University in the US.
A grasshopper who is in fear of an attacker, such as a spider, will enter a situation of stress and will consume a greater quantity of carbohydrate-rich plants – similar to humans under stress who might eat more sweets.
This type of reaction will, in turn, cause chemical changes in the grasshopper and in its excretions, affecting the ecosystem it inhabits. ...
2012-06-15
Computed tomographic colonography (CTC), also known as virtual colonoscopy, administered without laxatives is as accurate as conventional colonoscopy in detecting clinically significant, potentially cancerous polyps, according to a study performed jointly at the San Francisco VA Medical Center, the University of California, San Francisco and Massachusetts General Hospital.
"I think we have demonstrated that laxative-free CTC is a valid tool for detecting polyps that are clinically significant," said co-author and site principal investigator Judy Yee, MD, chief of radiology ...
2012-06-15
Drawn together by the force of nature, but pulled apart by the force of man – it sounds like the setting for a love story, but it is also a basic description of how scientists have begun to make more efficient organic solar cells.
At the atomic level, organic solar cells function like the feuding families in Romeo and Juliet. There's a strong natural attraction between the positive and negative charges that a photon generates after it strikes the cell, but in order to capture the energy, these charges need to be kept separate.
When these charges are still bound together, ...
2012-06-15
NEW YORK (June 14, 2012) — A novel form of vitamin B3 found in milk in small quantities produces remarkable health benefits in mice when high doses are administered, according to a new study conducted by researchers at Weill Cornell Medical College and the Polytechnic School in Lausanne, Switzerland.
The findings, recently reported in the June 2012 issue of the journal, Cell Metabolism, reveal that high doses of the vitamin precursor, nicotinamide riboside (NR) — a cousin of niacin — prevent obesity in mice that are fed a fatty diet, and also increase muscle performance, ...
2012-06-15
BALTIMORE, Md., June 14, 2012 – Within two decades, 60 percent of the world's population will live in cities, and coping with the resulting urban drinking water and sanitation issues will be one of the greatest challenges of this century. A U.S. Forest Service study recently published in Urban Ecosystems proposes an expanded view of the complex world of urban water.
The study presents a new conceptual framework that addresses characteristics of watersheds that are affected by urban land uses, including:
hydrologic connectivity between aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems ...
2012-06-15
Preventable childhood deaths caused by illnesses such as pneumonia and diarrhea can be nearly eliminated in 10 years according to researchers from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and the National Institutes of Health. In a new commentary featured in the June issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association, researchers outline a strategy and benchmarks for curbing childhood preventable deaths and recommend a new common vision for a global commitment to end all preventable child deaths.
Developed in 2000 by the United Nations, eight Millennium ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] Take-home methadone maintenance treatment associated with decreased hospital admissions