This is an academic paper that provides a case study on how a community used teleconferencing among stakeholders to implement a peer program to support those who come to the emergency department after experiencing a nonfatal overdose. And in-depth analysis of a learning collaborative is provided.
Harm Reduction Resources
- Educational
- Post-overdose response
- Recovery coaching
- Advocates / Peers
- Community Coalitions
- Community Health Officials
- Hospitals
- Medical
- Policymakers
This is an academic paper which describes the implications of a community-based non-profit's transition from in-person provision of low threshold medication assisted treatment (MAT) to a tele-health model. The organization also provided services such as harm reduction, counseling, and peer support to individuals with opioid use disorder. The study concludes that while retention rates of patients did drop, they remained excellent in comparison to in-person MAT care.
- Medications for Opioid Use Disorder
- Addiction Treatment Providers
- Advocates / Peers
- Community Coalitions
- Community Health Officials
- Medical
From AHRQ (Volume 2), a resource that provides tools and strategies for rural primary care providers to: 1) prevent opioid use disorder (OUD); 2) educate on medications for opioid use disorder (MOUD); 3) implement MOUD; and 4) prevent opioid overdose.
- Cautious Opioid Prescribing
- Medications for Opioid Use Disorder
- Overdose prevention
- Addiction Treatment Providers
- Community Health Officials
- Hospitals
- Medical
This report acts as a resource guide for service providers on improving outcomes for American Indian and Alaskan Native individuals who were previously incarcerated and are returning to their communities. The guide outlines suggestions such as culturally responsive programs and resources offering stable housing and substance use needs.
- Family Support
- Housing, Education, and Employment
- Addiction Treatment Providers
- Community Coalitions
- Community Health Officials
- Criminal Justice
- First Responders
- Harm Reduction Specialists
- Law Enforcement
This is a training program from the Indian Health Service to prepare first responders to use naloxone for an opioid overdose. Educational material on naloxone, including links to training videos, are provided.
- Overdose prevention
- Post-overdose response
- Community Coalitions
- Community Health Officials
- First Responders
- Harm Reduction Specialists
- Law Enforcement
This issue brief, a product of several collaborating organizations including IDSA, HIVMA and PIDS, identifies policy issues and provides comprehensive recommendations for addressing infectious diseases related to opioid use disorder.
- Comprehensive services
- Educational
- Medications for Opioid Use Disorder
- Syringe service program / Needle exchange
- Community Coalitions
- Community Health Officials
- Harm Reduction Specialists
- Health Insurers
- Hospitals
- Medical
- Policymakers
This academic paper assesses the readiness of churches in the Appalachian Highlands to address addiction by developing the Church Addiction Response Scale. This scale is a 41 item survey which addresses views about addiction, views about interacting with people who are addicted to substances, and views about the church's role in addressing addiction. The results suggest that equipping a church-based workforce to provide support for people living with addiction seems attainable.
- Educational
- Community Coalitions
- Community Health Officials
- Policymakers
This is an academic paper that provides commentary on innovative strategies to increase physical distancing among those with substance use disorders beyond relaxing regulations for buprenrophine and methadone as part of the response to the Covid/coronavirus pandemic.
- COVID / Coronavirus related
- Harm Reduction Specialists
- Medical
- Policymakers
This report provides summary guidance and recommendations from CDC and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services for prevention and control of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection, viral hepatitis, sexually transmitted diseases (STDs), and tuberculosis (TB) for persons who use drugs illicitly. It also summarizes existing evidence of effectiveness for practices to support delivery of integrated prevention services.
- Educational
- Syringe service program / Needle exchange
- Community Coalitions
- Community Health Officials
- Harm Reduction Specialists
- Health Insurers
- Hospitals
- Medical
- Policymakers
This is an academic paper discussing The Opioid Initiative, launched in Oregon in 2015, which focuses on integrating efforts to improve patient care and safety, and population health, by increasing access to nonopioid pain treatment, supporting medications for opioid use disorder and naloxone access for people taking opioids, decreasing opioid prescribing, and using data to inform policies and interventions. This state initiative has shown promising results.
- Cautious Opioid Prescribing
- Comprehensive services
- Medications for Opioid Use Disorder
- Overdose prevention
- Community Coalitions
- Community Health Officials
- Harm Reduction Specialists
- Hospitals
- Medical
- Policymakers
This is a publication by the National Academy for State Health Policy (NASHP) that highlights strategies states are using to better deploy emergency intervention to reduce opioid overdose deaths, improve access to care, and provide better treatment services in rural areas.
This report also describes sustainable financing structures to support these strategies and services. There is also mention of unique rural barriers and how to overcome them as well as case studies of comprehensive community responses.
- Comprehensive services
- Early Intervention
- Medications for Opioid Use Disorder
- Overdose prevention
- Community Coalitions
- Community Health Officials
- First Responders
- Harm Reduction Specialists
- Health Insurers
- Hospitals
- Medical
- Pharmacies
- Policymakers
In this academic paper, the authors investigated how syringe service programs can prove their cost effectiveness by calculating how many HIV infections the program would need to prevent in order to be considered cost-saving. The study concluded that the syringe service program would only need to prevent three HIV infections in their community to be considered cost effective.
- Syringe service program / Needle exchange
- Community Health Officials
- Harm Reduction Specialists
- Policymakers