Long-term effects of opioid overdose prevention and response training on medical student knowledge and attitudes toward opioid overdose: A pilot study.

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

3-1-2022

Publication Title

Addictive Behaviors

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Medical settings provide ideal opportunities to identify patients with substance use disorders and provide harm reduction and treatment resources. Medical students often volunteer in the community and can spend substantial time with patients, serving as touchpoints. Accordingly, medical schools have begun training in harm reduction. Initial studies show such training acutely improves knowledge, but sustained effects remain unclear. This pilot study explored longer-term impacts of Opioid Overdose Prevention and Response Training (OOPRT) on medical student knowledge about opioids, overdose, and naloxone.

METHODS: Students completed a survey about knowledge of opioid use disorder, overdoses, and attitudes towards patients. This included Opioid Overdose Knowledge (OOKS) and Opioid Overdose Attitudes (OOAS) scales. A subset of students was invited to attend OOPRT and complete a post-training survey. All who completed the baseline survey were invited to complete a 6-month follow-up. We analyzed long-term training effects on OOKS and OOAS scores.

RESULTS: 89 students completed baseline and 6-month follow-up surveys; of these, 22 received training. OOPRT yielded significant improvements in knowledge of signs of opioid overdose (F(2,38) = 18.04, P < .001), actions to take during overdose (F(2,38) = 8.32, P = .001), and naloxone use (F(2,38) = 35.46, P < .001), along with attitudes regarding overdose competencies (F(2,38) = 99.40, P < .001) and concerns (F(2,38) = 8.86, P < .001). When comparing over time, students who attended OOPRT retained significantly higher competency scores than those who did not attend F(1,87) = 40.82, P < .001). No other significant differences were observed.

CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrates immediate efficacy of OOPRT in improving opioid overdose knowledge and attitudes and sustained changes at 6 months, compared to standard undergraduate medical curricula alone. Future research with larger sample sizes is underway to validate these preliminary findings and examine the difference in attitudes and knowledge retention over time. Given that students report interest in receiving OOPRT and consider it worthwhile, systematic study is warranted.

Volume

126

First Page

107172

Last Page

107172

DOI

10.1016/j.addbeh.2021.107172

ISSN

1873-6327

PubMed ID

34774365

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