Examining changes in pain interference via pandemic-induced isolation among patients receiving medication for opioid use disorder: a secondary data analysis
Tessa Frohe, Tim Janssen, Bryan R. Garner, Sara J. Becker

TL;DR
This study found that social isolation during the pandemic worsened pain for people on opioid treatment, suggesting that reducing isolation could help improve their quality of life.
Contribution
The study identifies pandemic-induced isolation as a mediator of pain interference in patients on medication for opioid use disorder.
Findings
Pandemic-induced isolation partially mediated changes in pain interference among patients on MOUD.
Higher pre-pandemic pain interference and opioid use were associated with increased isolation during the pandemic.
Social isolation during the pandemic was linked to worsened pain levels in this population.
Abstract
Early in the pandemic, the United States population experienced a sharp rise in the prevalence rates of opioid use, social isolation, and pain interference. Given the high rates of pain reported by patients on medication for opioid use disorder (MOUD), the pandemic presented a unique opportunity to disentangle the relationship between opioid use, pain, and social isolation in this high-risk population. We tested the hypothesis that pandemic-induced isolation would partially mediate change in pain interference levels experienced by patients on MOUD, even when controlling for baseline opioid use. Such work can inform the development of targeted interventions for a vulnerable, underserved population. Analyses used data from a cluster randomized trial (N = 188) of patients on MOUD across eight opioid treatment programs. As part of the parent trial, participants provided pre-pandemic data…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOpioid Use Disorder Treatment · Substance Abuse Treatment and Outcomes · Suicide and Self-Harm Studies
