Using Policy Tools to Improve Population Health — Combating the U.S. Opioid Crisis

Author(s):  
Colleen L. Barry ◽  
Brendan Saloner
2019 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. 26-29
Author(s):  
Michael Willis ◽  
Cheryl Neslusan ◽  
Silas Martin ◽  
Pierre Johansen ◽  
Christian Asseburg ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
Vol 35 (11) ◽  
pp. 2109-2115 ◽  
Author(s):  
Taressa Fraze ◽  
Valerie A. Lewis ◽  
Hector P. Rodriguez ◽  
Elliott S. Fisher

2018 ◽  
Vol 10 ◽  
pp. 292-298
Author(s):  
Diana Romero ◽  
Sandra E. Echeverria ◽  
Madeline Duffy ◽  
Lynn Roberts ◽  
Alexis Pozen

BMJ ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 346 (apr17 1) ◽  
pp. f2426-f2426 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. McPherson

Author(s):  
J. Lloyd Michener ◽  
Brian C. Castrucci ◽  
Don W. Bradley ◽  
Edward L. Hunter ◽  
Craig W. Thomas

Chapter 1 provides an introduction to the history and background to a general desire to try to find ways to improve population health through primary care and public health. The first Practical Playbook derived from an internet-based initiative that sought to find, assemble, assess, and share stories of how communities and agencies across the United States were working together to improve health. This text is the second development from that, after the realization that a completely new text was needed that would build on the experiences of the broadening array of sites and sectors and provide a concise set of tools, methods, and examples that support multi-sector partnerships to improve population health. The chapter then outlines the coverage of the rest of the chapters.


Author(s):  
Wilson M. Compton ◽  
Rita J. Valentino ◽  
Robert L. DuPont

AbstractInterventions to address the U.S. opioid crisis primarily target opioid use, misuse, and addiction, but because the opioid crisis includes multiple substances, the opioid specificity of interventions may limit their ability to address the broader problem of polysubstance use. Overlap of opioids with other substances ranges from shifts among the substances used across the lifespan to simultaneous co-use of substances that span similar and disparate pharmacological categories. Evidence suggests that nonmedical opioid users quite commonly use other drugs, and this polysubstance use contributes to increasing morbidity and mortality. Reasons for adding other substances to opioids include enhancement of the high (additive or synergistic reward), compensation for undesired effects of one drug by taking another, compensation for negative internal states, or a common predisposition that is related to all substance consumption. But consumption of multiple substances may itself have unique effects. To achieve the maximum benefit, addressing the overlap of opioids with multiple other substances is needed across the spectrum of prevention and treatment interventions, overdose reversal, public health surveillance, and research. By addressing the multiple patterns of consumption and the reasons that people mix opioids with other substances, interventions and research may be enhanced.


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