Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences,Morehouse School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.
J Natl Med Assoc. 2012 Jul-Aug;104(7-8):342-50. doi: 10.1016/s0027-9684(15)30175-9.
Opioid abuse and addiction have increased in frequency in the United States over the past 20 years. In 2009, an estimated 5.3 million persons used opioid medications nonmedically within the past month, 200000 used heroin, and approximately 9.6% of African Americans used an illicit drug. Racial and ethnic minorities experience disparities in availability and access to mental health care, including substance use disorders. Primary care practitioners are often called upon to differentiate between appropriate, medically indicated opioid use in pain management vs inappropriate abuse or addiction. Racial and ethnic minority populations tend to favor primary care treatment settings over specialty mental health settings. Recent therapeutic advances allow patients requiring specialized treatment for opioid abuse and addiction to be managed in primary care settings. The Drug Addiction Treatment Act of 2000 enables qualified physicians with readily available short-term training to treat opioid-dependent patients with buprenorphine in an office-based setting, potentially making primary care physicians active partners in the diagnosis and treatment of opioid use disorders. Methadone and buprenorphine are effective opioid replacement agents for maintenance and/or detoxification of opioid-addicted individuals. However, restrictive federal regulations and stigmatization of opioid addiction and treatment have limited the availability of methadone. The opioid partial agonist-antagonist buprenorphine/naloxone combination has proven an effective alternative. This article reviews the literature on differences between buprenorphine and methadone regarding availability, efficacy, safety, side-effects, and dosing, identifying resources for enhancing the effectiveness of medication-assisted recovery through coordination with behavioral/psychological counseling, embedded in the context of recovery-oriented systems of care.
阿片类药物滥用和成瘾在美国过去 20 年中日益频繁。2009 年,估计有 530 万人在过去一个月内非医疗目的使用阿片类药物,20 万人使用海洛因,约 9.6%的非裔美国人使用非法药物。少数族裔在获得和获得精神卫生保健方面存在差异,包括物质使用障碍。初级保健医生经常被要求区分适当的、有医学指征的阿片类药物在疼痛管理中的使用与不适当的滥用或成瘾。少数族裔人群往往更倾向于选择初级保健治疗环境而不是专业的精神卫生治疗环境。最近的治疗进展允许需要专门治疗阿片类药物滥用和成瘾的患者在初级保健环境中接受管理。2000 年《药物滥用治疗法》使有资格的医生能够在有短期培训的情况下,在办公室环境中用丁丙诺啡治疗阿片类药物依赖患者,这可能使初级保健医生成为阿片类药物使用障碍诊断和治疗的积极合作伙伴。美沙酮和丁丙诺啡是治疗阿片类药物成瘾者的有效阿片类药物替代药物,可用于维持或解毒。然而,联邦法规的限制和对阿片类药物成瘾和治疗的污名化限制了美沙酮的供应。阿片类部分激动剂-拮抗剂丁丙诺啡/纳洛酮合剂已被证明是一种有效的替代药物。本文综述了丁丙诺啡和美沙酮在可获得性、疗效、安全性、副作用和剂量方面的文献,确定了通过与行为/心理咨询相协调来提高药物辅助康复效果的资源,这些咨询嵌入在以康复为导向的护理系统中。