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Prescription Disposal Practices: A 2-Year Ecological Study of Drug Drop Box Donations in AppalachiaGray, Jeffrey, Hagemeier, Nicholas E, Brooks, Billy, Alamian, Arsham 16 July 2015 (has links)
Objectives. We quantified controlled substance donations via permanent drug donation boxes over 2 years in a region with high prescription abuse, assessing medication characteristics, time between dispensing and donation, and weight of medications donated per capita.
Methods. In partnership with Drug Enforcement Administration and local law enforcement, we analyzed permanent drug donation box collections in 8 Northeast Tennessee locations from June 2012 to April 2014. We recorded controlled substance dosage units along with the product dispensing date.
Results. We collected 4841 pounds of pharmaceutical waste, 4.9% (238.5 pounds) of which were controlled substances, totaling 106 464 controlled substance doses. Analysis of dispensing dates for controlled substances indicated a median of 34 months lapsed from dispensing to donation (range = 1–484 months). The mean controlled substance donation rate was 1.39 pounds per 1000 residents. Communities with fewer than 10 000 residents had a statistically higher controlled substance donation rate (P = .002) compared with communities with 10 000 or more residents.
Conclusions. Permanent drug donation boxes can be an effective mechanism to remove controlled substances from community settings. Rural and urban community residents should be provided convenient and timely access to drug disposal options.
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Nonmedical Use of Prescription Stimulants among Community College Students in TennesseeSevak, Rajkumar J., Foster, Kelly N., Alamian, Arsham, Pack, Robert P, Hagemeier, Nicholas E 04 December 2016 (has links)
Purpose: Nonmedical use of stimulant medications (NMUS) among college students is an important and growing problem. The annual prevalence of NMUS among four-year college students has nearly doubled since 2008 and exceeds NMUS in non-college peers. Community college students are an understudied population regarding NMUS. Given noted NMUS differences in 4-year students and non-college peers, one cannot assume community college students’ cognitions, perceptions, and behaviors mirror either peer cohort. We conducted a web-based survey across 10 community colleges in Tennessee (TN) to assess correlates and consequences of NMUS.
Methods: We developed an initial version of the 60-item survey questionnaire using previously validated, theoretically based survey items and other items developed by the research team. The survey instrument was then reviewed and assessed for content validity by our research team, and thereafter pilot tested with East Tennessee State University undergraduate students for range measures, item order, and best practices for survey construction. The final 55-item survey instrument was designed using web-based survey software (i.e., Qualtrics). Ten of 13 community colleges in TN granted approval for their students to participate in the study (N=53096). A modified Tailored Design Method approach was utilized to maximize response rate across four email contacts, and monetary incentives were offered to encourage participation in the study. Regulatory authorities (e.g., institutional review boards, institutional offices) from East Tennessee State University and participating community colleges approved the conduct of this study. Data were analyzed using SPSS (version 22). Descriptive statistics were calculated to evaluate prevalence, source, motives and consequences of NMUS. Student’s t-tests and chi-square tests were conducted to compare nonmedical stimulant users and nonusers across a number of variables. Results were considered significant for p < 0.05. Results: A total of 3113 students completed the survey (response-rate = 5.8%), of which 302 (9.7%) were past-year nonmedical stimulant users. A significantly greater proportion of users were diagnosed with a mental health condition (22.2%) than non-users (9.6%). Compared to non-users, significantly greater proportions of users reported using tobacco products, such as cigarettes (34.5% vs. 14%), e-cigarettes (12.5% vs. 4%), and vapors (18.4% vs. 6.7%). Users further reported using more types of illicit drugs (1.9 ± 0.1), more alcoholic drinks per week (2.9±0.3), and more occasions of binge drinking per month (1.8±0.2) than non-users (1.1±0.02, 1.3±0.07, 0.7±0.04, respectively).
Only 14.2% of users (n=43 from 302) reported having prescriptions for prescription stimulants. Common sources of prescription stimulants were friends (62.9%), family members (12.3%), and street suppliers (9.9%). Commonly endorsed reasons for NMUS were ‘to improve academic performance’ (63.9%), ‘to have more energy’ (49.7 %), ‘to relieve tension’ (22.2%), and ‘to feel good or get high’ (16.6 %). Adverse effects resulting from NMUS included: lack of appetite (45.4%), difficulty sleeping (38.4 %), and racing heart (31.1%). Unlike the published findings from 4-year college students, low GPA, male gender, Caucasian race and membership in fraternity organizations were not associated with NMUS in community colleges.
Conclusion: The present study provides useful information on characteristics of users and patterns and consequences of NMUS in community colleges students. NMUS appears to be associated with illicit substance use, binge drinking and disrupted mental health in community college students in TN. Friends are the most common source and desire to enhance academic performance is the most salient motive for NMUS. Despite facing adverse consequences, college students continued using stimulants nonmedically. These findings underscore the need for development of public health programs that target prevention of NMUS in community colleges.
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Legal and Public Health Landscape: The Opioid Epidemic and Opportunities for State and Federal EngagementHagemeier, Nicholas E. 14 November 2016 (has links) (PDF)
The panel laid the foundation for topics discussed during the Summit by noting the historical and current landscape of the opioid epidemic, opportunities for engagement, and why collective partnerships and collaboration are critical to resolving the crisis.
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Comfort, Complexities, and Confrontation: Health Care Provider Communication and Prescription Drug Abuse and MisuseHagemeier, Nicholas E., Tudiver, Fred 25 March 2015 (has links)
This presentation describes (1) the role of communication in prescription drug abuse prevention and treatment and (2) the outcomes of 5 focus groups conducted in the Appalachian Region.
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ETSU DIDARP Project 1: Health Care Provider Communication and Prescription Drug Abuse and MisuseHagemeier, Nicholas E., Tudiver, Fred 13 March 2015 (has links)
No description available.
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Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome Prevention Behaviors Among Primary Care Prescribers, Buprenorphine Prescribers, and Pain Management Clinic DirectorsRoss, A., Dinh, A., Basden, J. A., Click, Ivy, Hagemeier, Nicholas E. 06 December 2016 (has links)
No description available.
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Community Pharmacists’ Engagement in Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome PreventionGilliam, Holly, Click, Ivy, Basden, J. A., Carico, R., Flippin, H., Murray, C., Hagemeier, Nicholas E. 04 March 2016 (has links)
Abstract available through the Journal of the American Pharmacists Association.
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Pharmacists' and Patients' Perceptions of Medication Adherence in Rural AppalachiaPhillips, C., Hagemeier, Nicholas E. 01 March 2013 (has links)
Abstract available through the Journal of the American Pharmacists Association.
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Pharmacists’ and Prescribers’ Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome (NAS) Prevention Behaviors: A Preliminary AnalysisHagemeier, Nicholas E., Click, Ivy A., Flippin, Heather, Gilliam, Holly, Ross, Alexandra, Basden, Jeri Ann, Carico, Ronald 05 December 2017 (has links)
Background Maternal opioid use and neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS) incidence have increased markedly in the US in recent years. Objectives (1) To assess prescribers’ and community pharmacists’ guideline-based NAS prevention behaviors; (2) to describe providers’ perceptions of contraceptive appropriateness in female patients of childbearing age. Method Cross-sectional study of 100 randomly selected primary care physicians, 100 prescribers authorized to engage in in-office treatment of opioid use disorders with buprenorphine, 100 pain management clinic directors, and 100 community pharmacists in Tennessee (N = 400 providers total) to evaluate self-reported engagement in 15 NAS prevention behaviors and perceived appropriateness of 8 contraceptive methods in opioid using women of childbearing age. Results An overall response rate of 17.5% was obtained. Pain clinic directors reported the most engagement in NAS prevention, engaging 80% or more of female patients of childbearing age prescribed an opioid in 11 prevention behaviors, followed by buprenorphine prescribers (8 behaviors), primary care physicians (5 behaviors), and community pharmacists (2 behaviors). Pain clinic directors, primary care physicians, and community pharmacists perceived oral contraceptive pills and patches to be as appropriate as long-acting, reversible forms of contraception (e.g., implants, injectable depots, intrauterine devices). Conclusion Provider engagement in behaviors that could prevent NAS is variable. Interventions should be implemented that equip providers to engage patients in conversations about long-acting, reversible contraception.
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A Dissemination and Implementation Science Approach to the Epidemic of Opioid Use Disorder in the United StatesMathis, Stephanie M., Hagemeier, Nicholas, Hagaman, Angela, Dreyzehner, John, Pack, Robert P. 01 August 2018 (has links)
Purpose of Review: This review aims to (1) conceptualize the complexity of the opioid use disorder epidemic using a conceptual model grounded in the disease continuum and corresponding levels of prevention and (2) summarize a select set of interventions for the prevention and treatment of opioid use disorder.
Recent Findings: Epidemiologic data indicate non-medical prescription and illicit opioid use have reached unprecedented levels, fueling an opioid use disorder epidemic in the USA. A problem of this magnitude is rooted in multiple supply- and demand-side drivers, the combined effect of which outweighs current prevention and treatment efforts. Multiple primary, secondary, and tertiary prevention interventions, both evidence-informed and evidence-based, are available to address each point along the disease continuum—non-use, initiation, dependence, addiction, and death.
Summary: If interventions grounded in the best available evidence are disseminated and implemented across the disease continuum in a coordinated and collaborative manner, public health systems could be increasingly effective in responding to the epidemic./p>
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