This study will disseminate five surveys collecting individual's attitudes and experiences during buprenorphine treatment for Opioid Use Disorder during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The primary objective of this study is to better understand patients' attitudes and experiences during office-based opioid treatment (OBOT) in the COVID-19 pandemic. This study specifically aims to evaluate attitudes and experiences of people prescribe buprenorphine across five domains with the hope of evaluating a) whether telemedicine has improved their access to and experiences with OBOT; b) the factors that motivate individuals in OBOT to abstain from opioid drug use; c) how patients' view the use of cannabis, benzodiazepines, and nicotine during OBOT; d) the degree to which patients in OBOT report using cannabis, benzodiazepines, and nicotine and how their use might have changed during the COVID-19 pandemic; and e) whether patients attitudes towards cannabis, benzodiazepines, and cigarettes/e-cigarettes are associated with their use of those same substances.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
817
CHA Center for Mindfulness and Compassion
Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States
Patient's Experiences with Office-Based Opioid Treatment
This is an eight-item scale that measures the degree to which participants report being able to access buprenorphine treatment-related appointments and medications before and during the COVID-19 pandemic. Participants will be asked to rate each of the eight questions on a 7-point Likert scale from 1 = "extremely easy" to 7= "extremely difficult."
Time frame: Day 1
Reasons for Abstaining from Opioids Questionnaire
This 17-item scale will measure participant ratings of the importance of 17 factors that motivate abstinence from illicit drug use during office-based opioid treatment. Participants will be asked to rate each of these 17 items on a scale from 0 = "not at all important" to 4 = "extremely important."
Time frame: Day 1
Patients' Attitudes Toward the Use of Cannabis During Office-Based Opioid Treatment
Participants will rate three items on a scale of 1 = "completely disagree" to 7 = "completely agree." Specifically, participants will rate the degree to which they feel cannabis use is acceptable during office-based opioid treatment (OBOT), they believe that their prescribers' feel cannabis use is acceptable during OBOT, and they feel comfortable discussing cannabis use with their buprenorphine prescribers.
Time frame: Day 1
Patients' Attitudes Toward the Use of Cigarettes/E-Cigarettes During Office-Based Opioid Treatment
Participants will rate three items on a scale of 1 = "completely disagree" to 7 = "completely agree." Specifically, participants will rate the degree to which patients should be encouraged to quit smoking cigarettes and e-cigarette during office-based opioid treatment (OBOT) and the degree to which they feel smoking helps manage cravings during OBOT.
Time frame: Day 1
Patients' Attitudes Toward and Experiences with the Use of Benzodiazepines during Office-Based Opioid Treatment
Participants will rate three items on a scale of 1 = "completely disagree" to 7 = "completely agree." Specifically, participants will rate the degree to which benzodiazepine use is acceptable during office-based opioid treatment (OBOT), they feel OBOT providers find benzodiazepine use by their patients acceptable, and they feel comfortable openly discussing their benzodiazepine use with their buprenorphine prescriber.
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Time frame: Day 1