Publication | Open Access
The mixed message behind “Medication-Assisted Treatment” for substance use disorder
22
Citations
8
References
2017
Year
Opioid EpidemicFamily MedicineSubstance UseClinical TreatmentDrug TreatmentTreatment NeedSubstance Use DisordersHarm ReductionSubstance Use RecoverySubstance Use TreatmentAddiction MedicinePain ManagementHealth Services ResearchMixed MessageHealth SciencesTreatment UtilizationPsychiatryHealth PolicyAddiction TreatmentTreatment ServicesSubstance AbuseAddictionSubstance AddictionMedicineOpioid Use Disorder
The gap between treatment utilization and treatment need for substance use disorders (SUDs) remains a significant concern in our field. While the growing call to bridge this gap often takes the form of more treatment services and/or better integration of existing services, this perspective proposes that more effective labels for and transparent descriptions of existing services would also have a meaningful impact. Adopting the perspective of a consumer-based health-care model (wherein treatments and services are products and patients are consumers) allows us to consider how labels like Addiction-focused Medical Management, Medication-Assisted Treatment, Medication-Assisted Therapy, and others may actually be contributing to the underutilization problem rather than alleviating it. In this perspective, "Medication-Assisted Therapy" for opioid-use disorder (OUD) is singled out and discussed as inherently confusing, providing the message that pharmacotherapy for this disorder is a secondary treatment to other services which are generally regarded, in practice, as ancillary. That this mixed message is occurring amidst a nationwide "opioid epidemic" is a potential cause for concern and may actually serve to reinforce the longstanding, documented stigma against OUD pharmacotherapy. We recommend that referring to pharmacotherapy for SUD as simply "medication," as we do for other chronic medical disorders, will bring both clarity and precision to this effective treatment approach.
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