Individuals with Substance Use Disorder (SUD) who do not have empathy toward oneself, or self-compassion, may limit their opportunities for personal growth and overall well-being. Due to scarce empirical studies examining interactions between self-compassion, personal growth and well-being in persons with SUD, the goal of this research was to examine associations among these concepts. A survey was administered to patients in treatment for SUD using validated scales (Sussex-Oxford Compassion for the Self Scale (SSOCS-S), Personal Growth Initiative (PGI) Scale-II, and World Health Organization (WHO)-5 Well-Being Index) and 153 responses were collected.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: This study investigated the efficacy and safety of providing medication for opioid use disorder (MOUD) and individualized telehealth in Kentucky, a state severely impacted simultaneously by the opioid epidemic and the COVID-19 pandemic.
Methods: The investigation analyzed pre- and post-COVID-19 characteristics in 191 opioid use disorder (OUD) buprenorphine outpatients who completed an 18-question survey in late 2020 related to COVID testing, OUD relapses, obstacles to maintaining abstinence, and treatment resources.
Results: The study revealed no statistically significant changes in drug use before and after the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic despite monthly volume increases.
One of the district and universal aspects of emergency medical service (EMS) is the belief that before its implementation many people were dying or being killed by ill-equipped, poorly trained "hearse drivers" and that this tragic state of affairs has been rectified by the advances in the prehospital phase of care. Except for cases of nontraumatic, out-of-hospital cardiac arrest there is almost no convincing scientific evidence to prove that prehospital care has had an impact on morbidity or mortality. At the very foundation of this problem is the lack of a set of broad-based, well-conceived, accurate, reliable, uniform EMS data.
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