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1315. Mind the Gap: Medical Trainees Require Training in Hepatitis C, Drug Use and Mental Health to Help Address the Opioid Crisis

BACKGROUND: Dramatic increases in acute hepatitis C (HCV) incidence is linked to the opioid epidemic and increased injection drug use. Over 50% of people with HCV also have a mental illness. IDSA/HIVMA calls for the integration of infectious diseases, addiction medicine, and mental health as key to...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Corace, Kimberly, Ares, Isabelle, Schubert, Nicholas, Altenberg, Jason, Willows, Melanie, Kaluzienski, Mark, Garber, Gary
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6253100/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofy210.1148
Descripción
Sumario:BACKGROUND: Dramatic increases in acute hepatitis C (HCV) incidence is linked to the opioid epidemic and increased injection drug use. Over 50% of people with HCV also have a mental illness. IDSA/HIVMA calls for the integration of infectious diseases, addiction medicine, and mental health as key to addressing the opioid epidemic. Barriers identified include limited physician education and stigma. This study examined medical trainees’ gaps in training and attitudes toward HCV, drug use, and mental illness. METHODS: Medical students and residents (N = 98) at a large Canadian University completed questionnaires assessing stigma, attitudes, knowledge, and training related to HCV, drug use, and mental illness. RESULTS: Most participants were medical residents (71%). Within-subjects ANOVAs showed that trainees worked with more patients with mental illness (71%) than drug use (55%) or HCV (21%) (P’s < 0.001). Trainees reported less positive experiences with patients with drug use (34%) and HCV (36%) compared with those with mental illness (55%) (p’s < 0.05). They reported that injection drug use (68%), prescription opioids (66%), and heroin use (59%) were the most challenging substance use problems to treat (P < 0.001). They were less satisfied working with patients with drug use (40%) or HCV (40%) than mental illness (59%) (P’s < 0.01). Trainees reported they were more able to help patients with mental illness (83%) than HCV (65%) or drug use (73%) (P’s < 0.01). Only 34% saw HCV treatment as central to their professional role. Their training better prepared them to treat mental illness (58%) than drug use (41%) or HCV (19%) (P’s < 0.001). They were more interested in training in drug use (76%) and mental health (71%) than HCV (62%) (P’s < 0.01). CONCLUSION: Medical trainees report being ill-equipped to treat patients with HCV and drug use (specifically opioids) and are less satisfied with this work. Many report attitudes that may be viewed by patients as stigmatizing. There is a large knowledge gap related to the effectiveness of HCV treatment. Addressing the opioid crisis requires a physician workforce that is prepared to integrate treatment for HCV, drug use, and mental illness. Infectious disease specialists can take a leadership role in building capacity to foster integration. DISCLOSURES: All authors: No reported disclosures.