After the Drug Enforcement Agency loosened restrictions and permitted telehealth appointments for buprenorphine prescriptions, the percentage of patients who continued treatment for at least 180 days tripled, the Drexel study found.
“When you subject people to a regime of surveillance and mandatory attendance and a dozen other additional program requirements, they rightfully believe that they are in a prison and not in a clinic,” said Cocchiaro, who is also a professor of family medicine at Drexel University College of Medicine and Penn State Hershey College of Medicine. “When you relax restrictions, they come to your clinic more, not less. They stay with the program more, not less. They recover better, not worse.”
He said telehealth appointments do not reduce the quality of healthcare the patient receives, emphasizing that patients can still receive wraparound services, including counseling.
The study’s authors say the study makes a case that the regulatory changes should persist, and that federal agencies should reevaluate the way they approach drug use disorder.
“Our goal is to really liberalize this access to [Medication-Assisted Treatment], so more people can get the medication that can help people stay in treatment for opioid use disorders and can also reduce the risk of overdose death if they are taking the medication,” Ward said.
“These policies are emergency use only, essentially … So there’s no guarantee that these are going to exist in the post-pandemic era. So it’s on us as researchers to really advocate for the lessened restrictions to stay in place.”