Patient Care Access News

COVID-19 Pandemic Hindered Patient Access to Opioid Treatment Programs

Patients with opioid use disorder had limited patient access to opioid treatment programs during the COVID-19 public health emergency. Yet, access to buprenorphine, an opioid drug treatment, remained undisrupted.

The study findings suggested that the COVID-19 public health emergency did not impact buprenorphine possession.

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By Sarai Rodriguez

- Disruptions in care during the COVID-19 pandemic caused decreased patient access to opioid treatment program services for those with opioid use disorder (OUD), according to research published in JAMA Health Forum.

Opioid-involved overdose mortality rates reached a record high of 69,710 during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020.

At the onset of the pandemic, many physicians restricted in-person care appointments, and many patients avoided or delayed in-person care. Researchers posited these factors impacted patient access to essential OUD treatment, including buprenorphine possession, urine drug testing, and opioid treatment program services.