Why it's inappropriate not to treat incarcerated patients with opioid agonist therapy

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Abstract

Due to the criminalization of drug use and addiction, opioid use disorder is overrepresented in incarcerated populations. Decades of evidence supports opioid agonist therapy as a highly effective treatment that improves clinical outcomes and reduces illicit opioid use, overdose death, and cost. Opioid agonist therapy has been both studied within correctional facilities and initiated prerelease. It has been found to be beneficial, yet few incarcerated persons receive this evidence-based treatment. In addition to not offering treatment initiation for those who need it, most correctional facilities forcibly withdraw stable patients from opioid agonist therapy upon their entry into the criminal justice system. This approach limits their access to evidence-based health care and results in negative outcomes for individuals, communities, and society.

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APA

Wakeman, S. E. (2017). Why it’s inappropriate not to treat incarcerated patients with opioid agonist therapy. AMA Journal of Ethics, 19(9), 922–930. https://doi.org/10.1001/journalofethics.2017.19.9.stas1-1709

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