Rural opioid stewardship: Lessons learned from one community and the retirement of a pain management clinician

Objective: This commentary offers a perspective of a rural community's response to a dissolution of a pain management practice with an emphasis on how to avoid serious harm for patients on opioid therapy when continuity of chronic pain management care is interrupted. Methods: The ‘Ecosystem of...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Holly Ann Russell, Jade Malcho, Michele Lawrence
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2025-07-01
Series:Preventive Medicine Reports
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211335525001639
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849724259540140032
author Holly Ann Russell
Jade Malcho
Michele Lawrence
author_facet Holly Ann Russell
Jade Malcho
Michele Lawrence
author_sort Holly Ann Russell
collection DOAJ
description Objective: This commentary offers a perspective of a rural community's response to a dissolution of a pain management practice with an emphasis on how to avoid serious harm for patients on opioid therapy when continuity of chronic pain management care is interrupted. Methods: The ‘Ecosystem of Recovery”9 framework was utilized to explore the response of rural communities to pain management clinic closures that includes community engagement, incorporation of a multi-disciplinary team, clinician education and consultative support to deliver evidence-based care while triaging patient needs. This project was undertaken as a quality improvement initiative and did not meet the definition of research according to 45CFR46, the federal law dictating human subjects research in the US. Results: Community engagement resulted in a unified, multi-disciplinary team-based approach that supported existing medical infrastructure to transition patients seeking continuation of care. Emergency Departments linked patients to existing primary care offices, behavioral health and addiction medicine specialists based on patient presentation. Education and consultation efforts supported triage of their acute medical needs and linkage to appropriate level of care. Buprenorphine initiation to treat opioid withdrawal and harm reduction strategies for overdose prevention, including naloxone, were included at the core of the strategies. Conclusions: Implementation of clinician and patient support strategies are recommended when gaps in pain management treatment occur in resource-limited communities. We share our coordinated community-based approach for patients who are navigating this care transition, while educating and supporting clinicians how to evaluate and initiate treatment for opioid withdrawal and opioid use disorder.
format Article
id doaj-art-ea3ff065826a4f5eb0d91fd5ac0d9a24
institution DOAJ
issn 2211-3355
language English
publishDate 2025-07-01
publisher Elsevier
record_format Article
series Preventive Medicine Reports
spelling doaj-art-ea3ff065826a4f5eb0d91fd5ac0d9a242025-08-20T03:10:47ZengElsevierPreventive Medicine Reports2211-33552025-07-015510312410.1016/j.pmedr.2025.103124Rural opioid stewardship: Lessons learned from one community and the retirement of a pain management clinicianHolly Ann Russell0Jade Malcho1Michele Lawrence2Department of Family Medicine and Center for Community Health and Prevention, University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, Rochester, NY 14642, USADepartment of Psychiatry & Emergency Medicine, University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, Rochester, NY 14642, USA; Corresponding author at: 601 Elmwood Avenue, Rochester, NY 14642, USA.Department of Psychiatry, University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, Rochester, NY 14642, USAObjective: This commentary offers a perspective of a rural community's response to a dissolution of a pain management practice with an emphasis on how to avoid serious harm for patients on opioid therapy when continuity of chronic pain management care is interrupted. Methods: The ‘Ecosystem of Recovery”9 framework was utilized to explore the response of rural communities to pain management clinic closures that includes community engagement, incorporation of a multi-disciplinary team, clinician education and consultative support to deliver evidence-based care while triaging patient needs. This project was undertaken as a quality improvement initiative and did not meet the definition of research according to 45CFR46, the federal law dictating human subjects research in the US. Results: Community engagement resulted in a unified, multi-disciplinary team-based approach that supported existing medical infrastructure to transition patients seeking continuation of care. Emergency Departments linked patients to existing primary care offices, behavioral health and addiction medicine specialists based on patient presentation. Education and consultation efforts supported triage of their acute medical needs and linkage to appropriate level of care. Buprenorphine initiation to treat opioid withdrawal and harm reduction strategies for overdose prevention, including naloxone, were included at the core of the strategies. Conclusions: Implementation of clinician and patient support strategies are recommended when gaps in pain management treatment occur in resource-limited communities. We share our coordinated community-based approach for patients who are navigating this care transition, while educating and supporting clinicians how to evaluate and initiate treatment for opioid withdrawal and opioid use disorder.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211335525001639PainSubstanceRuralOpioidDrug
spellingShingle Holly Ann Russell
Jade Malcho
Michele Lawrence
Rural opioid stewardship: Lessons learned from one community and the retirement of a pain management clinician
Preventive Medicine Reports
Pain
Substance
Rural
Opioid
Drug
title Rural opioid stewardship: Lessons learned from one community and the retirement of a pain management clinician
title_full Rural opioid stewardship: Lessons learned from one community and the retirement of a pain management clinician
title_fullStr Rural opioid stewardship: Lessons learned from one community and the retirement of a pain management clinician
title_full_unstemmed Rural opioid stewardship: Lessons learned from one community and the retirement of a pain management clinician
title_short Rural opioid stewardship: Lessons learned from one community and the retirement of a pain management clinician
title_sort rural opioid stewardship lessons learned from one community and the retirement of a pain management clinician
topic Pain
Substance
Rural
Opioid
Drug
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211335525001639
work_keys_str_mv AT hollyannrussell ruralopioidstewardshiplessonslearnedfromonecommunityandtheretirementofapainmanagementclinician
AT jademalcho ruralopioidstewardshiplessonslearnedfromonecommunityandtheretirementofapainmanagementclinician
AT michelelawrence ruralopioidstewardshiplessonslearnedfromonecommunityandtheretirementofapainmanagementclinician