In the News
How PHI’s CA Bridge is Transforming Opioid Overdose Treatment
- Pleasanton Weekly
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Focus Areas
Alcohol, Tobacco, Drugs & Mental Health, Capacity Building & Leadership, Health Care & Population Health -
Programs
Bridge, CA Bridge -
Strategic Initiatives
Opioids
“Nearly 90% of patients who manage to survive an opioid overdose don’t get the follow-up addiction treatment they desperately need. Treatment shouldn’t be a reward, it should be a right, and nearly 9 in every 10 people are robbed of that.
However, all it takes is one person to start the change towards better, and for Alameda County and the citizens of Oakland, that is Dr. Andrew Herring. Instead of hiding in his office behind hard-to-schedule appointments, insurance restrictions, and mounds of paperwork, he meets the patients when and where they need it the most, ready to help: right after the overdose and in the emergency room.
Herring graduated from Harvard Medical School and completed his residency in emergency medicine at Highland Hospital in Oakland, where he is now an attending emergency physician and Chief of Addiction Medicine, leading a national movement to transform healthcare for substance use and addiction.
Our Current System
Across the U.S., traditional opioid care models often require patients to detox before receiving medications like buprenorphine or demand referrals that delay treatment for days, if not weeks. This drawn-out process becomes frustrating and even dangerous for many overdose victims who need treatment as soon as possible.
Herring understands the urgency in a way that most of the system doesn’t.
At any point in time, they’re just a balloon that’s going to go. You might only have this one interaction. And the question is, how powerful can you make it?Andrew Herring, MD
Program Director, CA Bridge, Bridge, Public Health Institute
To him, each patient is not just another file on his desk with vital numbers and an Insurance ID; they are real people who need real help. That means acting fast with no waiting, no red tape, just help when people need it most. While most systems hesitate, he gets to work right there in the ER, no matter who, what, where, or when.
The Bridge Initiative
Set on this mission, Herring recognized the importance of emergency treatment for opioid overdoses. Emergency departments are often the only source of care for the 27 million uninsured Americans, yet few realize how critical they are. Herring recognized that patients who survive an overdose shouldn’t have to rely on hard-to-schedule follow-up visits to start recovery.
Through his co-founding of the CA Bridge initiative, he brought addiction treatment directly into the ER with same-day medications like buprenorphine, including long-lasting injections that give patients a real chance to stabilize and remove the obstacle of having to schedule regular appointments.
Among participating sites across California, the Public Health Institute estimates 236,000 patients have been seen for substance use disorders, 176,000 identified with opioid use disorder, and 78,000 provided buprenorphine during emergency visits. Huge numbers.”
Click on the link below to read the full article.
Originally published by Pleasanton Weekly
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