Effective Date: June 1st, 2018
This guideline presents recommendations for the diagnosis and management of opioid use disorder (OUD) in primary care with a focus on induction and maintenance of buprenorphine/naloxone (Suboxone®) opioid agonist treatment (OAT) for adults and youth ≥ 12 years.
OUD can be effectively treated with buprenorphine/naloxone in primary care and is not contingent on having access to counselling or inpatient detox. Free online training and in-person preceptorships with experienced buprenorphine/naloxone prescribers are available through the Provincial Opioid Addiction Treatment Support Program to all primary care practitioners in B.C. The goal of this guideline is to empower primary care practitioners to recognize and treat OUD with referral to specialist support such as the Rapid Access to Consultative Expertise (RACE) line when necessary, as with any other area of general practice. The provincial Addictions Medicine RACE line is available at 1-877-696-2131, Monday to Friday from 8 am to 5 pm.
Family practitioners are also encouraged to support patients who begin buprenorphine/naloxone in specialized addiction settings and then transfer to their family practitioner for long-term care (see long-term care section).
The intention of this guideline is not to suggest automatically transferring patients currently being treated for OUD with methadone to buprenorphine/naloxone; this requires careful consultation and discussion between patient and provider. This guideline does not provide guidance on opioid prescribing for pain and is not intended for patients taking opioid medication as prescribed for pain. For patients diagnosed with OUD who have complex chronic pain and/or other co-morbidities, consult with the RACE line. These patients will likely require individualized support beyond the scope of this guideline. Depending on the level of complexity, many patients with OUD and concurrent chronic pain can be successfully treated with buprenorphine/naloxone in primary care after consultation.
This guideline is a summary of the provincial Guideline for the Clinical Management of Opioid Use Disorder1 developed by the BC Centre on Substance Use (BCCSU) and the BC Ministry of Health, available online at bccsu.ca. Appropriate use of this guideline benefits from reference to the provincial guideline. Despite the large size of the provincial guideline, readers will find that it is well organized to allow easy identification of key topics and useful guidance. Reviewing the full guideline will enhance one’s ability to treat OUD.
Opioid Use Disorder (OUD) is a chronic relapsing illness characterized by problematic use of and addiction to opioids. OUD is associated with increased morbidity and mortality and is considered a major driver of the recent increases in overdose deaths that have led to BC’s Public Health Emergency.1 Furthermore, fentanyl and fentanyl-analogues in the illicit drug market have created a toxic drug supply in BC, which has significantly increased the risk of overdose death (also known as opioid poisoning). The number of overdose deaths has increased since the public emergency was declared in April 2016. In 2017, 1422 suspected overdose deaths were reported by the B.C. Coroners Service, an increase of 43% from 2016.5 However, when treated effectively, patients with OUD can achieve long-term, sustained recovery. Primary care practitioners can play a key role in providing safe, effective treatment and care that supports long-term recovery from OUD.6–8
Appendix B: Literature Review provides an overview of the evidence supporting the clinical management of OUD described in this guideline. Refer to the Guideline for the Clinical Management of Opioid Use Disorder for a detailed review of the evidence. Refer also to the Management of opioid use disorders: a national clinical practice guideline.9
“Withdrawal Management” has a specific meaning within the addiction medicine community. It describes the short-term process commonly known as detoxification or “detox” and does not simply refer to the management of withdrawal symptoms. Withdrawal management (inpatient or outpatient) often involves use of a short-term opioid agonist taper but does not include transition to stable, long-term opioid agonist treatment. In this guideline, “withdrawal management alone” refers to a short-term detox (days or weeks) typically administered in an inpatient or intensive outpatient program, which does not bridge to long-term continuing addiction treatment. Due to serious safety risks, including increased risk of relapse, and increased high risk behaviours that may lead to serious harms and overdose death, withdrawal management alone is not recommended.2–4
Opioid Agonist Treatment may also be called “opioid replacement therapy” or “opioid substitution therapy”. Opioid agonist treatment includes the use of buprenorphine/naloxone, methadone, slow-release oral morphine and injectable hydromorphone and diacetylmorphine, and has been shown to be superior to withdrawal management alone.10,11 It results in improved retention in treatment, sustained abstinence from opioid use and reduced risk of morbidity and mortality. The provincial Guideline for the Clinical Management of Opioid Use Disorder provides a detailed evidence review of opioid agonist treatment. Opioid agonist treatment can be part of the continuum or pathway of care that includes recovery.
Buprenorphine is safer than methadone with less risk of respiratory depression, fewer drug-drug interactions, and less risk of diversion or non-medical use.11 Buprenorphine is a long-acting semi-synthetic partial opioid agonist that effectively alleviates opioid withdrawal symptoms and cravings without producing the same degree of euphoria associated with full agonist opioids like heroin, oxycodone and fentanyl. Buprenorphine’s partial agonist activity results in a “ceiling effect” where increasing therapeutic doses do not cause increasing respiratory depression. Commonly observed side effects include headaches, pain, nausea, vomiting, hyperhidrosis, constipation, insomnia, vasodilation and over-sedation. These side effects are similar to but lower in intensity than side effects of full opioid receptor agonists (e.g., methadone). Buprenorphine can act synergistically with benzodiazepines, alcohol and/or other sedating medications to significantly increase risk of respiratory depression, overdose or death. Concurrent use of buprenorphine and benzodiazepines or other drugs that suppress the central nervous system requires careful medical management. Refer to Appendix C: Opioid Use Disorder Medication Table or product monograph for information on side effects and drug-drug interactions.
Buprenorphine/naloxone (Suboxone®) is a 4:1 mixture of buprenorphine to naloxone that is administered sublingually. The inclusion of naloxone prevents diversion for injection. When taken as directed by the sublingual route, the buprenorphine component has high bioavailability, while naloxone has very low bioavailability. If diversion for injection occurs, the naloxone component then has high bioavailability and causes rapid onset of withdrawal symptoms in opioid-dependent individuals.
Precipitated withdrawal is a sudden onset of severe withdrawal symptoms that occurs when the first dose of buprenorphine/naloxone (Suboxone®) is taken while other opioids are still present in the body. This can be avoided if patients are in moderate to severe withdrawal before the first dose of buprenorphine/naloxone is administered (i.e., the majority of opioids are out of their system). Precipitated withdrawal results from buprenorphine’s high binding affinity and low activity at the opioid receptor. Buprenorphine rapidly binds to opioid receptors, replacing any other full opioid agonists present with a partial opioid agonist (i.e., partial or lower activation of the receptor) – essentially “precipitating” or immediately causing severe withdrawal. With appropriate addiction history taking and clinical assessment, the risk of precipitated withdrawal is reduced. There is minimal risk of precipitated withdrawal with subsequent doses of buprenorphine/naloxone. Refer to the Guideline for the Clinical Management of Opioid Use Disorder and/or Provincial Opioid Addiction Treatment Support Program for more information about precipitated withdrawal.
“How many times in the past year have you used an illegal drug or used a prescription medication for non-medical reasons?”12
Diagnose OUD using the DSM-513 diagnostic criteria outlined below. The presence of at least 2 of the criteria listed below indicates OUD, with the exception of patients who are taking opioids for chronic pain. Severity depends on the number of criteria present (MILD: 2 to 3 criteria, MODERATE: 4 to 5 criteria, SEVERE: 6 or more criteria).
Opioid Use Disorder Diagnostic Criteria (DSM-5)13
Impaired Control:
Social Impairment:
High Risk Use:
Physiologic effects:
*Note: For patients who are prescribed opioids under appropriate medical supervision, the presence of tolerance and withdrawal alone does not indicate OUD; additional criteria are required for diagnosis.
Due to risk of overdose death when untreated, offer patients diagnosed with opioid use disorder (including youth) immediate induction of opioid agonist treatment, if suitable (refer to Management section below). There is often a “window” when patients are interested in discussing treatment. Delays in starting treatment increase risk of overdose. If possible, same day or next day treatment initiation is preferred.
Consider the advantages and disadvantages of alternative treatment options and take into account patient needs and preferences when tailoring a comprehensive treatment plan for each individual. Ask about past experiences with opioid agonist treatment, psychosocial interventions and recovery-oriented services, which may inform the approach to treatment. Connect patients with additional health system and community supports and services where appropriate and if aligned with patient treatment goals.
Table 1: The pros and cons of common treatment options for opioid use disorder
Buprenorphine/naloxone (Suboxone®):
|
Methadone:
|
Refer to the provincial Guideline for the Clinical Management of Opioid Use Disorder and bccsu.ca for a detailed description of treatment options including OAT, slow release oral morphine, injectable OAT, psychosocial treatment interventions and recovery-oriented systems of care (Refer to Appendix B: Literature Review).
Family practice is well suited to treatment of OUD with buprenorphine/naloxone, including in rural and remote areas where specialized addiction services may be lacking and access to pharmacies for daily witnessing is limited. If questions arise, consider consultation with an addiction medicine specialist or a call to the RACE line. New buprenorphine/naloxone prescribers are encouraged to complete the online Provincial Opioid Addiction Treatment Support Program.
Buprenorphine/naloxone induction involves in-person or phone check-ins on the first day and periodic check-ins for the next few days, ideally by the prescriber, or member of the patient’s care team (e.g., physician, nurse practitioner, nurse) and communication either in person or by phone (refer to Figure 1 below). Patients often find their withdrawal symptoms and cravings well managed by the end of the first or second day.
Patients may be started on buprenorphine/naloxone at their primary care setting or at home. If started in a specialized care setting (e.g., hospital, rapid access addiction clinic, public or private OAT clinic, withdrawal management facility), subsequent long-term management can be provided by a primary care practitioner. A list of opioid agonist treatment clinics can be found at bccsu.ca.
The following populations may require specialist support, as they are beyond the scope of this guideline. Consult an addiction medicine specialist and/or contact the RACE line for:
For additional practitioner and patient resources refer to
Screening |
||
---|---|---|
Diagnosis of Opioid Use Disorder – DSM-5 criteria |
||
Harm Reduction – provide/recommend naloxone kit |
||
Preparing for buprenorphine/naloxone (bup/nlx) induction
|
||
Day 1 Max total Day 1 dose is 12 mg/3 mg bup/nlx
May incorporate home-based induction for first dose or all Day 1 doses: Consider what works best
|
Day 2 Max total Day 2 dose is 16 mg/4 mg bup/nlx
May transition to home-based induction
|
Day 3 onwards Maximum total daily dose Day 3 onwards is 24 mg/6 mg bup/nlx
|
End of first week Aim to achieve a stable once-daily dose of buprenorphine/naloxone that will sustain the patient 24 hours with no withdrawal symptoms and no medication-related intoxication or sedation by the end of the first week. Once a stable dose is achieved, patients can be transferred to receive daily dispensed doses at a community pharmacy, or prescribed take-home doses (1-2 week supply), at the discretion of the treating clinician. |
It is imperative to establish the following prior to induction:
The following may be completed subsequent to induction:
Typically, buprenorphine/naloxone induction is office-based with the first dose scheduled to take place under supervision at clinician’s office at a morning appointment, followed by 1-3 scheduled follow-up appointments over the first 3 days. Refer to Associated Document: Frequently Asked Questions: Buprenorphine/Naloxone Treatment for an example of a buprenorphine/naloxone prescription. Patients may pick up their Day 1 prescription and bring it to the office for witnessed ingestion by a primary care team member after assessment of withdrawal.
Emerging research suggests unobserved or ‘home’ induction is comparable to office-based induction in terms of safety, patient retention in continued treatment, and reduction in opioid use.7,14–16 Home induction may also be appropriate for youth who have a reliable caregiver present to provide support during induction.
It is recommended that the provider have some experience and comfort with buprenorphine/naloxone induction before recommending a home induction. Performing two office-based trials, before offering home induction as an option to patients, may be sufficient.
The core principles of induction are the same whether it is entirely office-based or incorporates home induction as part of the overall buprenorphine/naloxone treatment induction pathway. Providers and patients may benefit from a flexible approach to buprenorphine/naloxone induction. Some patients may require every induction dose to be witnessed by the practitioner. Others may benefit from having the first dose unobserved and then checking in the office later on Day 1, while others may be comfortable with self-managing all of Day 1, followed by an office visit on Day 2. Others may have initial doses witnessed and then transfer to unobserved home dosing. A combination of these pathways may be created to suit patient, caregiver and practitioner preferences.
Patients may benefit from home induction if they have:
For home induction, primary care practitioners should provide the following:
Refer to Associated Document: Home Induction Patient Handout.
Signs of active withdrawal include very bad flu-like symptoms, runny nose, nausea, vomiting, diarrhaea, chills or sweating, goose bumps, bone and muscle aches, stomach cramps, restlessness, yawning, enlarged pupils, shaking or tremors, anxiety, irritability, and a strong desire to use opioids.
If a buprenorphine/naloxone induction is started before a patient is in moderate to severe withdrawal, they will experience a sudden buprenorphine-induced ‘precipitated withdrawal’, which is much more severe than typical withdrawal, where onset of withdrawal symptoms is gradual. Experiencing a severe, precipitated withdrawal may discourage patients and/or providers from further attempts to use buprenorphine/naloxone.
Ask about the patient’s prior experience with withdrawal symptoms. The Clinical Opiate Withdrawal Scale (COWS, practitioner-led assessment) or Subjective Opiate Withdrawal Scale (SOWS, patient self-assessment) can be used to assess extent of withdrawal symptoms and guide induction dosing. Patients may already be familiar with what level of withdrawal they need to be in for successful induction.
For pharmaceutical grade opioids, the length of time from their last dose to onset of moderate to severe withdrawal may be predictable. For example, for pharmaceutical grade opioids, it typically takes 12-16 hours for short-acting opioids (heroin, morphine, hydrocodone, immediate-release oxycodone); 17-24 hours for intermediate-acting opioids (slow-release oral morphine, controlled-release hydromorphone, sustained released oxycodone; and 30-48 hours for long-acting opioids (methadone) before an individual starts to experience moderate withdrawal. While these estimates may be helpful to keep in mind, they may be an underestimate if illicit opioids are contaminated with unknown substances.
In reality, it is unknown which illicit opioids are currently available on the street and how these illicit opioids are metabolized, as there can be considerable variation in drug metabolism between individuals. Anecdotally, addictions medicine specialists in BC have observed precipitated withdrawal occurring even 24 hours or greater after last illicit opioid use due to contamination of drugs with illicit fentanyl analogues. Therefore, it is important to do the symptom assessment (COWS) and rely on the physical symptoms of withdrawal as well as to ask the patient about their experiences with withdrawal.
Withdrawal symptoms in youth may not correspond to COWS and SOWS criteria and therefore may require individualized clinical assessments. Consider calling the RACE line.
1. Immediately prior to first dose, assess withdrawal using COWS or SOWS: Patient must be in moderate to severe withdrawal (COWS ≥ 12 or SOWS ≥ 17) with no signs of alcohol intoxication. Dosing or titration may be adjusted or reduced for patients who are actively using alcohol, benzodiazepines, or other sedating medications, due to increased overdose risk.
2. 1st Dose: For the majority of patients, begin office or home induction with two 2 mg/0.5 mg buprenorphine/naloxone tablets taken sublingually. It is imperative that the patient take the medication sublingually. Place under the tongue and allow to dissolve (medication may take up to 10 minutes to completely dissolve), without swallowing, eating, drinking or smoking.
Consider adjusting dosage if withdrawal is very severe (COWS ≥ 24), up to 6 mg/1.5 mg buprenorphine/naloxone. If the patient is currently abstinent, consider lowering dose to 2 mg/0.5 mg buprenorphine/naloxone.
For youth, there is limited information on dosing. It is recommended that clinicians use an individualized and step-wise approach in order to determine the optimal dose for each patient. The induction recommendations included here and in the full guideline, when paired with clinical judgement, can be followed for youth. Refer to Associated Document: BCCSU Youth Supplement -available June 8th, 2018.
3. Check in 30-60 minutes after 1st dose for precipitated withdrawal.
If patient is experiencing precipitated withdrawal in office or at home: Discuss options and obtain informed consent to stop or continue induction depending on severity, patient preference and provider experience. Offer support and encourage patients to continue induction. It is important to note that precipitated withdrawal is not a life-threatening situation and does not generally require emergency department visits.
4. Check in 1-2 more times, 1-3 hours apart until withdrawal symptoms are relieved.
5. Calculate the total dose taken throughout the day. Patients following home induction instructions should be noting the total dose (number of tablets). The total dose taken on Day 1 is the Day 2 starting dose.
6. Arrange for the patient to come to the office early in the morning for their first Day 2 dose or call to check in if patient is following home induction instructions.
1. Meet the patient in office or check in by phone (ideally in the morning).
2. Optional: Check in one or two more times if needed (1-3 hours between check-ins).
1. Each day (ideally in the morning) meet patient in office or check-in by phone.
2. Aim to achieve an optimal stable once-daily dose of 12 mg/3 mg to 16 mg/4mg buprenorphine/naloxone that will sustain the patient for 24 hours with no withdrawal symptoms and no medication-related intoxication or sedation by the end of the first week (maximum total daily dose after day 2 is 24 mg/6 mg buprenorphine/naloxone per day).
3. Prescribe optimal once-daily dose and arrange for a follow-up appointment the next week. Daily dispensed buprenorphine/naloxone is not witnessed unless specifically requested by prescriber. Consider prescribing take-home doses at the discretion of the prescribing clinician provided patient is clinically stable and has access to safe-storage for medication (see below for more information).
4. For individuals not benefiting from buprenorphine/naloxone, consider transition to methadone or other alternative treatment options. Refer to specialist and see also the Guideline for the Clinical Management of Opioid Use Disorder for detailed methadone transition and management strategies.
Take-home dosing should be considered for all patients once clinically stable and able to safely store medication. Quick transition to take-home dosing has been shown to improve treatment adherence and retention.17,18 Consider the impact of providing or limiting take-home dosing on treatment adherence or loss to care. Refer to the Guideline for the Clinical Management of Opioid Use Disorder for information about take-home dosing. The rationale for not prescribing take-home doses should be carefully documented in the medical record.
It is recommended that the prescriber and patient complete an agreement form for receiving take-home doses which can be documented alongside the patient’s medical records. Provide a copy to the patient. Refer to Associated Document: BCCSU Patient Agreement for Take Home Dosing Form.
Considerations for safely maintaining a patient on take-home buprenorphine/naloxone:
The following are considerations for follow-up and reassessment:
Evidence of other non-medical opioid use and/or other substance use should prompt reassessment of treatment plan, but not automatic discontinuation of take-home doses. Before take-home prescriptions are discontinued, the prescriber must balance the risks of destabilizing patients by enforcing daily dispensing of medication. Daily witnessing of medication has not been shown to improve outcomes and is a recognized barrier for treatment engagement.19 In addition, the buprenorphine/naloxone formulation was created to facilitate take-home dosing and make treatment more attractive to patients due to its safety profile and lower risk of diversion.
Evidence of diversion (e.g., urine drug test negative for buprenorphine) should prompt immediate reassessment of treatment plan, and, in most cases, discontinuation of take-home dosing with consideration of dose reduction upon re-introduction of daily dispensing and supervised ingestion if doses have been missed (see Table 3, below). Patients should not be asked to leave treatment. It is critical to provide patients with non-judgemental support and encouragement in achieving their goals.
General indications for requesting urine drug testing:
Complete urine drug testing at point of care if available, otherwise at laboratory. See above description of urine drug testing and refer to Associated Document: Frequently Asked Questions: Buprenorphine/Naloxone Treatment and Appendix 2 in the Guideline for the Clinical Management of Opioid Use Disorder.
Dose |
Number of missed days |
Suggested Dose Adjustment |
---|---|---|
2 mg/0.5 mg - 4 mg/1 mg |
≥ 6 days |
No change |
6 mg/1.5 mg - 8 mg/2 mg |
≥ 6 days |
Restart at 4 mg/1mg |
> 8 mg/2mg |
6-7 days |
Restart at 8 mg/2 mg |
> 8 mg/2mg |
≥ 7 days |
Restart at 4 mg/1mg |
Methadone is recommended for opioid agonist treatment if induction with buprenorphine/naloxone is challenging or not preferred
• As of May 19th 2018, a federal exemption (through section 56 of the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act) will no longer be required to prescribe methadone.
• To be eligible to prescribe methadone, BC practitioners are required to complete education and training via the Provincial Opioid Addiction Treatment Support Program, available at bccsu.ca
• Primary care practitioners providing care to individuals with OUD are encouraged to consider taking the Provincial Opioid Addiction Treatment Support Program, alternatively patients can be referred to a local specialist in methadone treatment.
• Refer to Guideline for the Clinical Management of Opioid Use Disorder for detailed methadone induction and continuing care strategies, which are out of the scope of this summary guideline.
The terms “withdrawal management”, “withdrawal management alone” and “detox” can have multiple meanings for the general public and experts, which can lead to confusion. In this guideline, the term “withdrawal management” refers to a short-term detox or opioid agonist taper that takes place over days or weeks (not months). “Withdrawal management alone” refers to situations where short-term detox or opioid agonist taper is administered without a plan for long-term opioid agonist treatment.
Lack of availability to psychosocial treatment interventions and supports should not be a barrier to care and medication should not be contingent on patient willingness to engage in counselling or other supports. If available, and aligned with the patient’s treatment goals, offer psychosocial treatment interventions and supports in conjunction with pharmacological treatment.
Provide or recommend a take-home naloxone kit to all patients at risk of overdose. Information and referral to take-home naloxone programs and other harm reduction services, if appropriate (e.g., safe inhalation supplies, safe sex supplies), should be routinely offered as part of standard care for OUD. Additionally, patients with ongoing injection drug use can be referred to needle distribution and harm reduction supply sites, as well as supervised consumption and overdose prevention sites, where available.
Practitioners, patients and caregivers can access free naloxone kits and harm reduction supplies (refer to towardtheheart.com) which are also available for purchase at most pharmacies. First Nations Health Authority clients can access intramuscular and intranasal naloxone kits for free at any pharmacy.
For more information on accessing free naloxone kits and educational information and high quality videos describing how to administer naloxone for patients, caregivers and health care providers, refer to the BC Centre for Disease Control’s website: towardtheheart.com.
Treatment of OUD benefits from a compassionate, patient-centred and non-judgemental approach and consideration of the principles of trauma-informed practice. Consider asking patients about past trauma using the Adverse Childhood Experiences questionnaire available at collaborativetoolbox.ca. Family practitioners who use the questionnaire often find that many patients are open to being asked about past trauma. Conversations about adverse childhood experiences may provide an opportunity to offer additional supports. The Provincial Opioid Addiction Treatment Support Program, available bccsu.ca, includes a module on trauma-informed practice in the context of treating patients with OUD. Practitioners may also refer to the collaborativetoolbox.ca for information and resources about trauma-informed practice and adverse childhood experiences.
Primary care providers are encouraged to incorporate and use language that promotes recovery in their practice. Those seeking recovery require understanding and support, as well as referrals to appropriate services and programs to achieve their individual goals. Recovery-oriented care includes ensuring respect of the patient’s autonomy and individuality (both as partners in determining treatment modalities and throughout their recovery), emphasizing skills and strengths, and avoiding reinforcement of authoritarian models of care provision21. Additionally, and as appropriate, primary care teams are encouraged to work with patients to develop long-term, personalized, strengths-based recovery plans regardless of the severity, complexity, and duration of their substance use.
Buprenorphine/naloxone is recommended as the first-line treatment for adolescents and young adults (12 to 24 years of age) with moderate to severe OUD where indicated and appropriate. Buprenorphine/naloxone is approved for people over 18 years of age. For youth, the benefits associated with treating OUD outweigh the risks. It is recommended that practitioners document informed consent and rationale for treatment.
Practitioners are encouraged to develop a relationship with youth and promote screening and early intervention for substance use disorders in this population. It is recommended that all youth be screened for co-occurring mental health disorders, when appropriate. Youth benefit from age- and developmentally-appropriate, youth-oriented substance use care as well as continuity of care as they enter young adulthood.
The following documents accompany this guideline:
Resource Guides:
Withdrawal Scales:
Treatment agreement forms:
Patient Handout for starting Buprenorphine/Naloxone Home Induction:
Original concept based on a patient handout produced Dr. Joshua Lee.22
BCCSU Supplements and information sheets:
Contributors to Guideline
For more information, refer to the MSC Payment Schedule available at gov.bc.ca: MSP Payment Schedule
P13013 Assessment for Induction of Opioid Agonist Treatment (OAT) for Opioid Use Disorder ($42.65)
P13014 Management of OAT Induction for Opioid Use Disorder ($20.00)
This fee is payable for individual interactions with the patient during the first three days of OAT induction for opioid use disorder within the limits described in the following notes
P00039 Management of Maintenance OAT for Opioid Use Disorder ($23.42/week)
P15039 Point of Care urine drug screen testing for opioid agonist treatment ($12.53/biweekly)
General Practice Services Committee (GPSC) fees that support treatment of opioid use disorder: http://www.gpscbc.ca/news/gpsc/opioid-treatment-and-management-practice-resources
|
|
This guideline is based on scientific evidence current as of the Effective Date.
This guideline was developed by the Guidelines and Protocols Advisory Committee, approved by the British Columbia Medical Association and adopted by the Medical Services Commission.
The principles of the Guidelines and Protocols Advisory Committee are to:
|
Disclaimer The Clinical Practice Guidelines (the "Guidelines") have been developed by the Guidelines and Protocols Advisory Committee on behalf of the Medical Services Commission. The Guidelines are intended to give an understanding of a clinical problem and outline one or more preferred approaches to the investigation and management of the problem. The Guidelines are not intended as a substitute for the advice or professional judgment of a health care professional, nor are they intended to be the only approach to the management of clinical problems. We cannot respond to patients or patient advocates requesting advice on issues related to medical conditions. If you need medical advice, please contact a health care professional.