Applying lessons learned from global mental health to the opioid crisis
Jessica Magidson, Phd
Department of Psychology
University of Maryland
ABSTRACT:
The current opioid crisis in the United States has been considered an “epidemic of poor access to care”. Similar to the shortage of trained providers to prescribe medications to treat opioid use disorder (OUD), there is a severe shortage of trained providers to meet the behavioral health needs of patients with OUD. This talk will draw from global mental health models of “task sharing” to discuss how lessons learned from scaling up evidence-based interventions with lay health workers in low and middle-income countries can inform efforts to increase access to behavioral health care for patients with OUD in the US. Research will be presented using peer recovery coach models to integrate substance use treatment into HIV care in South Africa and to promote linkage and retention in OUD care locally.