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An exploratory study of sex and gender differences in demographic, psychosocial, clinical, and substance use treatment characteristics of patients in outpatient opioid use disorder treatment with buprenorphine.
Author(s) -
Anna Beth Parlier-Ahmad,
Caitlin E. Martin,
Maja Silobrčić Radić,
Dace S. Svikis
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
translational issues in psychological science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2332-2179
pISSN - 2332-2136
DOI - 10.1037/tps0000250
Subject(s) - buprenorphine , opioid use disorder , medicine , psychosocial , psychiatry , population , heroin , substance abuse , medical prescription , addiction , opioid , drug , receptor , environmental health , pharmacology
As treatment expansion in the opioid epidemic continues, it is important to examine how the makeup of individuals with opioid use disorder (OUD) is evolving. Treatment programs are increasingly utilizing buprenorphine, an effective OUD medication. This exploratory study examines sex and gender differences in psychosocial, clinical and substance use treatment characteristics of a clinical population in outpatient medication treatment for OUD with buprenorphine. This is a secondary data analysis from a cross-sectional survey study with retrospective medical record review conducted with patients recruited from an office-based opioid treatment clinic between July-September 2019. Participants on buprenorphine for at least 28 days at time of survey completion were included (n=133). Differences between men and women were explored with Pearson χ 2 and Fisher's Exact Tests for categorical variables and T-Tests for continuous variables. The sample was 55.6% women and nearly three-fourths Black (70.7%). Mean days in current treatment episode was 431.6 (SD=244.82). Women were younger and more likely to be unemployed, identify as a sexual minority, and live alone with children than men. More women than men had a psychiatric comorbidity. Women reported more prescription opioid misuse while men had more heroin only opioid use. More men reported comorbid alcohol use and a history of drug overdose. One-third of participants reported recent discrimination in a healthcare setting due to substance use. As buprenorphine-based outpatient treatment programs continue to expand, present study findings support evaluation of the unique needs of men and women in order to better tailor OUD-related services and improve treatment outcomes.

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