Medications for Opioid Use Disorder Through a Poison Prevention Lens Podcast Por  arte de portada

Medications for Opioid Use Disorder Through a Poison Prevention Lens

Medications for Opioid Use Disorder Through a Poison Prevention Lens

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This is my annual poison prevention episode. The topic this year is The risks and benefits of using medications for opioid use disorder (MOUD) from a Poison Prevention Educator's Point of View. My guests are Angel Bivens, RPh and Dr. Wendy Stephan. This podcast is for educational purposes only and is not medical advice. Please consult a qualified healthcare professional for medical guidance specific to your situation. Angel Bivens, RPh is the Managing Director at the Maryland Poison Center in Baltimore, Maryland. Wendy Stephan, PhD is the Educator and Epidemiologist at the Poison Control Center in Miami, Florida. She is also on the Board of Directors of America's Poison Centers, which is the organization that supports all 53 Poison Centers in the United States. To read the FULL show notes, visit https://www.thepharmacistsvoice.com. Click the Podcast tab, and select episode 368. Follow the podcast to get each new episode! Popular links are below. Apple Podcasts https://apple.co/42yqXOG Spotify https://spoti.fi/3qAk3uY Amazon/Audible https://adbl.co/43tM45P YouTube https://bit.ly/43Rnrjt Links and info from this episode Poison Help Line Number 1-800-222-1222America's Poison Centers https://poisoncenters.org/ National Poison Prevention Week is March 15-21, 2026. Use the partner toolkit on https://piper.filecamp.com/s/i/OOt8k1JlBFCc08KHFlorida Poison Control www.floridapoisoncontrol.orgLinkedIn for Wendy: https://www.linkedin.com/in/wendy-s-315b70178/Email Wendy wstephan@med.miami.eduX (Twitter): @floridapoison https://x.com/FloridaPoison Instagram @floridapoisoncontrol https://www.instagram.com/floridapoisoncontrol/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/FloridasPCC/ Angel Bivens, RPh on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/angelbivens/ Maryland Poison Center: https://www.mdpoison.com/ To find your local poison center: https://poisoncenters.org/ Poison Prevention Press: https://www.mdpoison.com/families/pppress.html (One-page, plain language e-newsletter published every other month on varying topics; all current and previous issues availablePoison Prevention Press sign up: http://bit.ly/MPCSignUp)eAntidote Blog: blog.mdpoison.com Facebook: MarylandPoisonCenter https://www.facebook.com/MarylandPoisonCenter X (Twitter): @MDPoisonCtr https://x.com/MDPoisonCtr X (Twitter): @MPCToxtidbits https://x.com/MPCToxtidbits Instagram: @MDPoisonCenter https://www.instagram.com/mdpoisoncenter/ YouTube: Maryland Poison Center https://www.youtube.com/@marylandpoisoncenter/videos Resources with clinical information for pharmacists: ToxTidbits: http://bit.ly/ToxTidbits (One-page clinical e-newsletter published monthly on various toxicologic topics; all current and previous issues available ToxTidbits sign up: http://bit.ly/TTBSignUp) Other Poison Prevention Episodes The Pharmacist's Voice Podcast Episode 27 featuring Dr. Wendy Stephan (July 2020)The Pharmacist's Voice Podcast Episode 87 featuring Angel Bivens (March 2021)The Pharmacist's Voice Podcast Episode 141 featuring Angel Bivens (March 2022)The Pharmacist's Voice Podcast Episodes 203, 204, 205, 206, and 207 (March 2023)The Pharmacist's Voice Podcast Episode 268 featuring Wendy and Angel (March 2024)The Pharmacist's Voice Podcast Episode 321 featuring Wendy and Angel (March 2025) Take-away messages from Episode 368 in March 2026: Overdose deaths declined between 2023 and 2024. More than 23 million people are in recovery or have recovered from SUD. Stigma associated with recovery needs to decline as the number of people in recovery increases.Recovery is possible, and it's probable.Poison Prevention Educators talk to students and communities about substance abuse prevention.Opioid use disorder has many possible entry points, including using pain killers from surgery or dental work, experimentation, and accidental use.Pharmacists have the opportunity to counsel on proper use and storage of MOUD.Counsel to take oral doses in private, so vulnerable individuals cannot see. Vulnerable individuals, like children or DD adults want to imitate the behavior of others.Avoid medication errors. Remove distractions while taking or giving medications, and read the label every time. Keep a personal MAR, if needed, to remember if a dose has been taken. If a medication error happens, get help (Poison Help or 9-1-1), forgive yourself, and continue your road to recovery. Narcan is import for anyone in recovery from opioid addiction to have. But, a person experiencing an OD will be unable to give themselves Narcan. Make sure your patients educate the people around them about what Narcan is, when to use it, and how to administer it. As a general rule, counsel on calling 9-1-1 after giving a dose of Narcan. It can wear off. Pharmacists should counsel on risks of keeping MOUD in the home: accidental use by a curious, opioid-naive child, confusion with other meds, accidental second dose, etc.Call Poison Help right away with ...
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