Connecting Care: The Intersection of HIV and Opioid Use Disorder, is a podcast of the HRSA-funded initiative, Strengthening Systems of Care for People with HIV and Opioid Use Disorder. We are working to ensure that people with HIV and OUD have access to care, treatment, and recovery services that are coordinated, client-centered, and culturally responsive.
Access to safe and reliable housing has an enormous influence on a person's health outcomes and ability to meet their needs. However, structural inequities and discriminatory practices associated with substance use can prevent or deter many people who use drugs from participating in formal housing programs and compound the lack of affordable housing. This month, the BMC team asks Dr. Karim Khan about his experience practicing street medicine and providing care at a local harm reduction housing program. In this episode, you learn about Karim's belief in this model of care for meeting people's diverse needs; the challenges in and successes of this approach to care; and the multitude of considerations that providers and people navigate when providing and accessing harm reduction housing services.“I think that public health departments and cities and policy makers are really central to this and really instrumental and can change an approach from basically throwing people in jail and throwing law enforcement at homeless tent encampments to refocusing and trying to get people into treatment, into housing, into health care, and provide folks with their basic needs.” -Dr. Karim Khan
A collision of drug criminalization, inadequate and discriminatory housing policies, and insufficient mental health and substance use care services has fostered open drug scene encampments in communities around the world. Open drug scene encampments concentrate social, medical, and public health challenges that include HIV transmission and opioid overdose. This month, the Boston Medical Center team talked with Dr. Jessie Gaeta, a national expert who has been a primary care and addiction medicine physician at the Boston Healthcare for the Homeless Program since 2002. Their conversation touches on some of the factors that contribute to the establishment and growth of encampments; how best to talk and ask about housing status; and helpful and harmful approaches to open drug scene encampments and the people who live there.
Throughout our Connecting Care podcast series, we've focused on different communities of adults with HIV and/or substance use disorders (SUDs). One population we haven't yet covered is the adolescent and young adult population. Treating youth with SUDs requires additional expertise and insight into their physical, emotional, mental, and social development. This month, Dr. Jessica Taylor talked with Dr. Sarah Bagley - a researcher and the Medical Director of the Catalyst Clinic at Boston Medical Center. During the conversation, Jessica and Sarah talk about the substance use risks for youth; developing an SUD; overdose prevention; special legal considerations of treating youth; and how their needs differ from those of older adults.
Methadone can be a life-changing treatment option for people with opioid use disorder. However, a number of federal and state regulations and logistical requirements can inhibit a person's ability to start and/or maintain methadone treatment. There are regulation exceptions that can help people get the essential care they need, and some providers are using these exceptions to initiate methadone while still complying with the regulatory boundaries.This month's podcast covers current regulations directing how and when people with opioid use disorder can access methadone treatment; what clinics can do to deliver life-saving care while complying with regulations; and how supporting clients on methadone can also enhance their ability to maintain antiretroviral therapy or practice HIV prevention behaviors.
The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) is a federal civil rights statute that was enacted in 1990 to protect individuals with disabilities from discrimination by employers, state and local government, and public-serving entities. The rights of people with HIV and opioid use disorder are protected under the ADA, yet these rights are frequently violated. This month, the Boston Medical Center team talks with Greg Dorchak, Assistant U.S. Attorney in the Civil Rights Unit at the U.S. Attorney's Office in Massachusetts, who has led the charge in protecting people with opioid use disorder. During the conversation they cover the different ways providers, facilities, and systems violate the ADA; how these violations differ from other types of discriminatory policies and practices; and how civil rights statutes can be useful tools in improving care systems for people with HIV and opioid use disorder.
Building on last month's episode about providing HIV and substance use care for people who are incarcerated, this month the Boston Medical Center team talks with Dr. Ricky Cruz, a primary care physician and addiction specialist who frequently provides care for people transitioning out of incarceration. During the conversation, Dr. Cruz describes how race shapes the systems and policies around opioid use disorder; shares the challenges of providing care for people recently released from jail or prison; offers advice on how physicians can talk to their patients about a history of incarceration; and highlights experiences that inspire him in his work.
Navigating the HIV and substance use systems of care presents a number of unique challenges, many of which can become more complex depending on a person's housing, employment, mental health, or economic situation. One system that immediately complicates a person's access to HIV and/or substance use care is the jail or prison system. This month, the BMC team talks with Dr. Alysse Wurcel, a doctor who provides HIV and substance use care in Massachusetts jails. Among a robust breadth of topics, they cover the complex realities of providing HIV and substance use care for people who are incarcerated; how these complexities are perpetuated and affect a person's access to care both in and out of the jail and prison system; and how HIV and substance use care in the jail and prison system is slowly starting to change.
In response to an increased risk of overdose, several communities in the U.S. are considering establishing spaces for people to use substances safely. These spaces have been referred to as Supervised Injection Facilities, safe consumption spaces, harm reduction spaces, or overdose prevention sites. Over the past few years, these spaces have garnered more support for their proven ability to reduce overdoses and meet other medical and psychosocial needs for people who use them. This month, our hosts talk through the benefits that these spaces have on HIV prevention, linkage to care and needed support services, fatal overdose prevention, and what it takes to get a sanctioned overdose prevention space in the U.S.
The growing opioid crisis across the United States has resulted in an increase in new HIV diagnoses. For many people, receiving an HIV diagnosis is life-changing news, and a person's circumstance can dictate how providers deliver the diagnosis as well as their approach to initiating HIV treatment, referred to as antiretroviral therapy, or ART. In this month's episode, our hosts discuss considerations and best practices for delivering an HIV diagnosis and initiating ART; how COVID-19 has changed the way providers are able to deliver an HIV diagnosis; and how ART and ART initiation has changed over time.
This month's Connecting Care episode is the second in a two-part series about treatment for Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) among people with opioid use disorder. In this second podcast, the Boston Medical Team takes a closer look at some of the challenges and opportunities related to treating HCV among people who inject drugs, and learn from Boston Health Care for the Homeless Program, which has successfully delivered HCV treatment to patients experiencing homelessness.
This month's Connecting Care episode is the first in a two-part series about treatment for Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) among people with opioid use disorder. In this first podcast, the Boston Medical Team discusses new HCV treatment options, policy and cost considerations, and novel venues and approaches to deliver HCV treatment to people who inject drugs. We sometimes present these medications as - I mean I think I've used the word “miracle” already on this podcast - as you know, an easy cure and incredibly effective, and that is so true. AND it is also true that if people don't have the other resources that they need to support themselves, to manage risk, to reduce harms, these medications will not have the impact that they could have.-Dr. Jessica Taylor
This month's Connecting Care episode continues the conversation about barriers to methadone treatment for patients, stigma, and what we can learn from other countries to advance policy and practice for methadone in the US.
This month's Connecting Care episode discusses the challenges associated with entering and staying in methadone treatment programs and opportunities to improve treatment experiences for all.Hiawatha Collins is the community mobilization coordinator at the National Harm Reduction Coalition and the board chair for VOCAL-NY.
This month's Connecting Care episode discusses the impact of structural racism at the intersection of HIV and OUD care and opportunities to think outside of the box to effect change. Dr. Bisola Ojikutu, an infectious disease physician who has dedicated her career to overcoming racial and ethnic inequity experienced by people living with or at risk for HIV, joins infectious disease and addiction specialists from Boston Medical Center Drs. Alex Walley, Jessica Taylor, and Sim Kimmel.
For Boston Health Care for the Homeless nurse Megan Sonderegger, providing client-centered care means literally meeting her clients where they are."To want to take PrEP, you have to have some hope for your future. If you have no hope and you don't have any idea that you're going to live past the next year, there's no reason to take Truvada. It just doesn't matter." -- Meagan Sonderegger, Healthcare for the HomelessDuring this month's episode of Connecting Care, Drs. Alex Walley, Jessica Taylor, and Sim Kimmel, HIV primary care doctor and addiction specialists, sit down with two clinicians from Boston Health Care for the Homeless Program, who share their experiences on the front lines, delivering innovative substance use treatment, HIV prevention, and HIV treatment where patients are.
Approximately one in seven black women who inject drugs in the United States will go on to contract HIV in her lifetime. That compares to one in 26 women who inject drugs overall, and one in 42 men who inject drugs overall. There are so many factors that impact adherence and health outcomes. During this Connecting Care podcast, Drs. Alex Walley, Jessica Taylor, and Sim Kimmel discuss HIV prevention and treatment among people who inject drugs.
When people learn there's a pill that's been available for many years, that will keep them safe from HIV. They are surprised and may want to know more. And when people are surprised and even upset, we know we need to do more.This month's Connecting Care episode is the first of a two-part series about HIV prevention and care among people who inject drugs. Addiction specialists from Boston Medical Center, Drs. Alex Walley, Jessica Taylor, and Sim Kimmel, share a case study on the topic.
COVID-19 has changed the way society operates in countless ways. During our inaugural podcast, our team of addiction specialists and HIV providers, Drs. Alex Walley, Jessica Taylor and Sim Kimmel from Boston Medical Center, discuss how COVID-19 has not only increased vulnerability among our patient population, it has challenged them to innovate and safely provide services. Drs. Walley, Taylor, and Kimmell will discuss a case study that will illustrate the role for medications for opioid use disorder (MOUD), such as buprenorphine and methadone, in HIV prevention among people who inject drugs.They will also outline regulatory changes during the COVID-19 public health emergency that facilitated MOUD access to populations at high risk of HIV acquisition and other complications of substance use disorder. And they will describe barriers and facilitators of OUD and HIV care during the pandemic.