Geographies of Colliding Epidemics: COVID-19 and Opioid Misuse
Topics: Medical and Health Geography
, Cultural and Political Ecology
, Rural Geography
Keywords: COVID-19, Opioid, Addiction, Pennsylvania
Session Type: Virtual Paper Abstract
Day: Saturday
Session Start / End Time: 2/26/2022 05:20 PM (Eastern Time (US & Canada)) - 2/26/2022 06:40 PM (Eastern Time (US & Canada))
Room: Virtual 23
Authors:
Brian King, Penn State University
Louisa Holmes, Penn State University
Andrea Rishworth, University of Toronto
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Abstract
The co-occurrence of the opioid epidemic and the COVID-19 pandemic is presenting significant challenges for human health and addiction treatment. Policy responses to mitigate the spread of COVID-19 have the potential to compound patterns of opioid use and misuse and affect the provisioning of treatment services. Social and economic patterns associated with the pandemic are expected to intensify mental health pressures and geographic patterns of opioid use and misuse. Since the onset of the pandemic, media attention and numerous policy commentaries have drawn attention to the intersections of addiction and COVID-19. However, there remain few empirical studies that examine the direct impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic for opioid overdose patterns. In this presentation, I report the findings from analyses of opioid overdoses in the state of Pennsylvania prior to and during the COVID-19 pandemic. These statistical analyses are supplemented with qualitative interviews with public health providers that have been conducted since December 2020. Opioid overdoses have increased significantly during the COVID-19 pandemic and spatial patterns of incidence vary across the state. This research indicates that the pandemic is transforming the opioid epidemic by disrupting pre-existing patterns of opioid overdose incidence, specifically in terms of the urban-rural divide, populations most impacted, and differences in morbidity and mortality.
Geographies of Colliding Epidemics: COVID-19 and Opioid Misuse
Category
Virtual Paper Abstract
Description
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