A scoping review of mHealth technologies for opioid overdose prevention, detection and response.

Drug Alcohol Rev

National Addiction Centre, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience, King's College London, London, UK.

Published: May 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • - Opioid overdose causes over 100,000 deaths annually worldwide, and mobile health (mHealth) technologies could potentially help prevent, detect, or respond to these overdoses, especially for individuals who use opioids alone.
  • - A systematic review of literature identified 14 relevant studies on mHealth technologies related to opioid overdose, categorized into four areas: technologies needing external intervention, biometric detection devices, automated antidote administration devices, and user willingness to adopt these technologies.
  • - The review suggests that while mHealth technologies can be beneficial in addressing the opioid crisis, their effectiveness depends on factors like user acceptability, discretion, device size, and accuracy in detecting overdoses.

Article Abstract

Issues: Opioid overdose kills over 100,000 people each year globally. Mobile health (mHealth) technologies and devices, including wearables, with the capacity to prevent, detect or respond to opioid overdose exist in early form, or could be re-purposed or designed. These technologies may particularly help those who use alone. For technologies to be successful, they must be effective and acceptable to the at-risk population. The aim of this scoping review is to identify published studies on mHealth technologies that attempt to prevent, detect or respond to opioid overdose.

Approach: A systematic scoping review of literature was conducted up to October 2022. APA PsychInfo, Embase, Web of Science and Medline databases were searched.

Inclusion Criteria: articles had to report on (i) mHealth technologies that deal with (ii) opioid (iii) overdose.

Key Findings: A total of 348 records were identified, with 14 studies eligible for this review across four domains: (i) technologies that require intervention/response from others (four); (ii) devices that use biometric data to detect overdose (five); (iii) devices that automatically respond to an overdose with administration of an antidote (three); (iv) acceptability/willingness to use overdose-related technologies/devices (five).

Implications: There are multiple routes in which these technologies may be deployed, but several factors impact acceptability (e.g., discretion or size) and accuracy of detection (e.g., sensitive parameter/threshold with low false positive rate).

Conclusion: mHealth technologies for opioid overdose may play a crucial role in responding to the ongoing global opioid crises. This scoping review identifies vital research that will determine the future success of these technologies.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/dar.13645DOI Listing

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