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Post-overdose interventions triggered by calling 911: Centering the perspectives of people who use drugs (PWUDs)

BACKGROUND: Opioid overdose deaths have increased exponentially in the United States. Bystander response to opioid overdose ideally involves administering naloxone, providing rescue breathing, and calling 911 to summon emergency medical assistance. Recently in the US, public health and public safety...

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Autores principales: Wagner, Karla D., Harding, Robert W., Kelley, Richard, Labus, Brian, Verdugo, Silvia R., Copulsky, Elizabeth, Bowles, Jeanette M., Mittal, Maria Luisa, Davidson, Peter J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6797193/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31622401
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0223823
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author Wagner, Karla D.
Harding, Robert W.
Kelley, Richard
Labus, Brian
Verdugo, Silvia R.
Copulsky, Elizabeth
Bowles, Jeanette M.
Mittal, Maria Luisa
Davidson, Peter J.
author_facet Wagner, Karla D.
Harding, Robert W.
Kelley, Richard
Labus, Brian
Verdugo, Silvia R.
Copulsky, Elizabeth
Bowles, Jeanette M.
Mittal, Maria Luisa
Davidson, Peter J.
author_sort Wagner, Karla D.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Opioid overdose deaths have increased exponentially in the United States. Bystander response to opioid overdose ideally involves administering naloxone, providing rescue breathing, and calling 911 to summon emergency medical assistance. Recently in the US, public health and public safety agencies have begun seeking to use 911 calls as a method to identify and deliver post-overdose interventions to opioid overdose patients. Little is known about the opinions of PWUDs about the barriers, benefits, or potential harms of post-overdose interventions linked to the 911 system. We sought to understand the perspectives of PWUDs about a method for using 911 data to identify opioid overdose cases and trigger a post-overdose intervention. METHODS AND FINDINGS: We conducted three focus groups with 11 PWUDs in 2018. Results are organized into 4 categories: willingness to call 911 (benefits and risks of calling), thoughts about a technique to identify opioid overdoses in 911 data (benefits and concerns), thoughts about the proposed post-overdose intervention (benefits and concerns), and recommendations for developing an ideal post-overdose intervention. For most participants, calling 911 was synonymous with “calling the police” and law enforcement-related fears were pervasive, limiting willingness to engage with the 911 system. The technique to identify opioid overdoses and the proposed post-overdose intervention were identified as potentially lifesaving, but the benefits were balanced by concerns related to law enforcement involvement, intervention timing, and risks to privacy/reputation. Nearly universally, participants wished for a way to summon emergency medical assistance without triggering a law enforcement response. CONCLUSIONS: The fact that the 911 system in the US inextricably links emergency medical assistance with law enforcement response inherently problematizes calling 911 for PWUDs, and has implications for surveillance and intervention. It is imperative to center the perspectives of PWUDs when designing and implementing interventions that rely on the 911 system for activation.
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spelling pubmed-67971932019-10-25 Post-overdose interventions triggered by calling 911: Centering the perspectives of people who use drugs (PWUDs) Wagner, Karla D. Harding, Robert W. Kelley, Richard Labus, Brian Verdugo, Silvia R. Copulsky, Elizabeth Bowles, Jeanette M. Mittal, Maria Luisa Davidson, Peter J. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Opioid overdose deaths have increased exponentially in the United States. Bystander response to opioid overdose ideally involves administering naloxone, providing rescue breathing, and calling 911 to summon emergency medical assistance. Recently in the US, public health and public safety agencies have begun seeking to use 911 calls as a method to identify and deliver post-overdose interventions to opioid overdose patients. Little is known about the opinions of PWUDs about the barriers, benefits, or potential harms of post-overdose interventions linked to the 911 system. We sought to understand the perspectives of PWUDs about a method for using 911 data to identify opioid overdose cases and trigger a post-overdose intervention. METHODS AND FINDINGS: We conducted three focus groups with 11 PWUDs in 2018. Results are organized into 4 categories: willingness to call 911 (benefits and risks of calling), thoughts about a technique to identify opioid overdoses in 911 data (benefits and concerns), thoughts about the proposed post-overdose intervention (benefits and concerns), and recommendations for developing an ideal post-overdose intervention. For most participants, calling 911 was synonymous with “calling the police” and law enforcement-related fears were pervasive, limiting willingness to engage with the 911 system. The technique to identify opioid overdoses and the proposed post-overdose intervention were identified as potentially lifesaving, but the benefits were balanced by concerns related to law enforcement involvement, intervention timing, and risks to privacy/reputation. Nearly universally, participants wished for a way to summon emergency medical assistance without triggering a law enforcement response. CONCLUSIONS: The fact that the 911 system in the US inextricably links emergency medical assistance with law enforcement response inherently problematizes calling 911 for PWUDs, and has implications for surveillance and intervention. It is imperative to center the perspectives of PWUDs when designing and implementing interventions that rely on the 911 system for activation. Public Library of Science 2019-10-17 /pmc/articles/PMC6797193/ /pubmed/31622401 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0223823 Text en © 2019 Wagner et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Wagner, Karla D.
Harding, Robert W.
Kelley, Richard
Labus, Brian
Verdugo, Silvia R.
Copulsky, Elizabeth
Bowles, Jeanette M.
Mittal, Maria Luisa
Davidson, Peter J.
Post-overdose interventions triggered by calling 911: Centering the perspectives of people who use drugs (PWUDs)
title Post-overdose interventions triggered by calling 911: Centering the perspectives of people who use drugs (PWUDs)
title_full Post-overdose interventions triggered by calling 911: Centering the perspectives of people who use drugs (PWUDs)
title_fullStr Post-overdose interventions triggered by calling 911: Centering the perspectives of people who use drugs (PWUDs)
title_full_unstemmed Post-overdose interventions triggered by calling 911: Centering the perspectives of people who use drugs (PWUDs)
title_short Post-overdose interventions triggered by calling 911: Centering the perspectives of people who use drugs (PWUDs)
title_sort post-overdose interventions triggered by calling 911: centering the perspectives of people who use drugs (pwuds)
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6797193/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31622401
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0223823
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