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Jun 28 2024

Increasing access to treatment for opioid use disorder

 Categories:  President’s Message Comments:   4 comments  Print Friendly Version  |   Share this item
Board President Christine M. Khandelwal, DO
DChristine M. Khandelwal, DO
If you have followed developments in the opioid overdose epidemic in North Carolina you may know that, even though the number of opioid painkillers prescribed in our state has fallen significantly in recent years, the number of overdose deaths has actually increased.

The reason, of course, is that inappropriate and excessive opioid prescribing was never the only factor contributing to opioid overdoses. Like many other states, we also have a tremendous challenge in North Carolina with opioid use disorder (OUD) and a lack of treatment options to help the people struggling with it. Indeed, opioid overdose data show that up to 80 percent of individuals who die from opioid overdose obtained their drugs illicitly and not through prescriptions written by licensed medical professionals.

Some of the physicians and PAs reading this message may be thinking, "Great! We are not the problem. Now I can finally stop thinking about the opioid crisis!” but that couldn’t be further from the truth. With overdose deaths still on the rise in North Carolina (up about 5 percent in each of the past three years, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) it has never been more important for our state to increase the number of prescribers who can treat patients struggling with substance use.

Regardless of medical specialty, all of us are caring for patients who also may be suffering from OUD as another one of their chronic illnesses. If you are willing to do this work, I encourage you to consider participating in training to provide office-based treatment for OUD. I have done this myself and have found the knowledge invaluable even though, as a hospice and palliative care physician, the patients I see are most often nearing the end of their lives.

Increasing patient access to treatment for substance use disorders, especially OUD, is a core strategy of the state of North Carolina’s Opioid Action Plan, which was adopted in 2017. In fact, the state reissued the plan as the Opioid and Substance Use Action Plan in 2021 to reflect the importance of making progress with treatment for OUD. The federal government is on the same path, with its new one-time training requirement for DEA registrants to complete eight hours of training in the management and treatment of opioid- and other substance use disorders.
Based on NCMB’s most recent (August 2023) survey of the physicians and PAs it licenses, many clinicians in the state are willing to treat patients with OUD. Nearly 60 percent of licensees who responded to our survey said they are at least somewhat willing to treat patients with OUD, provided they have access to specialty support. The great news is that our state has some excellent support infrastructure in place in the form of the NC Substance and Recovery Treatment Network, or NC STAR.

NC STAR provides hands-on assistance in planning and implementing treatment protocols for OUD, as well as ongoing support and access to specialty care for complex patients, in community practices across the state. The overall approach is for practices to screen existing patients in their practice for OUD and offer treatment or referral when needed.


NC STAR was established by addiction medicine specialists at UNC Chapel Hill’s School of Medicine, which serves as an academic “hub” in the network, providing speciality support and accepting referrals from “spoke” medical practices when they have patients who need advanced care. Mountain Area Health Education Center became the second academic hub in 2020 and ECU’s Brody School of Medicine joined as the latest hub in 2022.

I invited Dr. Robyn Jordan, Program Director of UNC’s Addiction Medicine Fellowship Program and founder of the NC STAR Network, to speak with Board Members at the May Board meeting about the important work NC STAR is doing. It is important for NCMB to stay up to date on current practices in addiction medicine to ensure the Board understands the nuances involved in caring for patients with OUD.

I sincerely hope you will take some time to learn more about NC STAR and current approaches for caring for patients with OUD with discreet, lifesaving and life-altering treatment.

Be well.




 Comments on this article:

I am a physician in recovery from a severe opioid use disorder that developed like many from a prescription from my radiation oncologist…no history of addiction and a non alcohol drinker…six and a half years in recovery…North Carolina has the best PHP in the country and our board is proactive and treats physicians facing addiction with compassion…I work for SAMHSA and I will share this article with the OCMO…good job

By Jeffrey Fraser MD on Jun 30, 2024 at 10:41am

MAT has been underfunded in the US and is the real cause of the overdose deaths, not more pills as Heroin addiction is limited to those with the OPRM1 A118G allele and 18 polymorphisms transmitted through families. The prevalence of Heroin addiction is rare, 4/1000 with incidence of 1/1000. steady since 1920.  When Portugal made MAT available the overdose deaths dropped 80%. In the US this would save 80,000 lives and a similar proportion in NC.  Dealing with the subculture of both types of addiction, the receptor type (opioids) and the non-receptor type (methamphetamine) requires two different approaches requires training by those in recovery, in addition to medical support.  We are on the right track.

By thomas kline md phd on Jun 30, 2024 at 10:59am

Dr. Fraser - Thank you for taking the time to comment, and for sharing your story. NCMB agrees that NCPHP is a critical resource for its licensees. Congratulations on your recovery and thank you for the kinds words!

By Jean Fisher Brinkley on Jun 30, 2024 at 1:06pm

Thank you for sharing your perspective Dr. Kline.

By Jean Fisher Brinkley on Jun 30, 2024 at 1:08pm
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