ATLANTA, Ga. ā Coming up with solutions to tackle the opioid epidemic, which plagues Kentuckians and people around the country, is no easy feat. Some of the brightest minds at the University of Kentucky shared their opioid research at the nationās largest gathering focused on combating the crisis.
The 2022 RX and Illicit Drug Summit in Atlanta brought together physicians, researchers and policymakers focused on addressing addiction issues. That included several experts from UK who are on the front lines of the opioid and addiction crises. They shared their work in the field of opioid use disorder research, treatment and prevention.
UK faculty sharing their research as part of this yearās summit included:
Chris Delcher, Ph.D., professor in UKās College of Pharmacy
Amanda Fallin-Bennett, Ph.D., assistant professor in UKās College of Nursing and program director for Voices of Hope
Katherine Marks, Ph.D., assistant professor in UKās College of Medicineās Department of Behavioral Science
Carrie Oser, Ph.D., professor in UKās College of Arts & Sciencesā Department of Sociology
Dana Quesinberry, J.D., D.P.H., assistant professor in UKās College of Public Health
Sharon Walsh, Ph.D., director of UK Center on Drug and Alcohol Research
Michelle Lofwall, M.D., professor in UKās College of Medicine
āI think that weāre making progress. I think itās not going to be something thatās solved in a short period of time. I think the approach of really going to each community and looking at the unique situation that exists in that community is really something thatās essential,ā Lofwall said.
That becomes increasingly more difficult in a world that has an evolving drug supply featuring highly potent synthetics.
āThatās something thatās a little out of our control, and something that weāre concerned about. I think we need to take it seriously as an entire country,ā Lofwall said.
Lofwall was among experts presenting āPolicy, Prescribing, and Clinical Practice: Lessons From Recent Evaluations in Kentucky,ā which highlighted three recent UK-led studies on opioid policy prescribing and clinical practice. Lofwall shared findings from a study focused on the usefulness of criminal drug records for prescribing and dispensing decisions.
She explained the challenges inherent in helping patients deal with pain.
āPain is not a diagnosis. Pain is a symptom of an underlying disease that we need to get to and treat the underlying problem. Not just mask a symptom,ā she said. āNo one goes into medicine wanting to do harm. Itās a really long path. It takes time to do a careful evaluation of someone. As patients become more complex and have more chronic diseases, thereās more chronic pain that we need more tools for. We need more help as well, and we need our patients also to advocate for themselves.ā
Walsh, Oser and Fallin-Bennett presented: āHEALing Communities Study: Deploying Evidence-Based Practices to Reduce Opioid Overdose Deaths Through Community Engagement and Partnerships,ā which highlighted the community engagement, criminal justice and peer support roles of UKās $87 million HEALing Communities Study.
The study aims to decrease opioid overdose deaths by 48 percent across four states, employing community engaged intervention. Lofwall said there needs to be more of a focus on the whole continuum of care.
āWe donāt want to just focus on helping people who already have the disease. That is definitely a focus. We want to prevent more people from getting to that point,ā she said.
Delcher and Quesinberry presented āInsights From State Data Into Deaths Related to Fentanyl, Fentanyl Analogs, Psychostimulants, and Novel Psychoactive Substances.ā They shared findings from Kentucky state data on overdose deaths related to fentanyl and other psychoactive substances and presented data showing shifts in the proportional impacts of these substances.
Marks presented āState Efforts to Improve the Continuum of Care for Substance and Opioid Use Disorders,ā which highlighted successes and lessons learned from Kentuckyās efforts to improve substance use disorder treatment.
Another step Lofwall said communities need to take, though it may be difficult for some to accept, is to move away from promoting what can be unhealthy behaviors, given many people are genetically inclined toward addiction.
āWe donāt want to promote and send messages that the way to have fun is with alcohol, nicotine, marijuana and other illicit drugs,ā she said. āWe need to have communities where you can have fun without that substance, and that we have cultures that promote that.ā