Content area

Abstract

Overdose mortality in the United States continues to climb, with Maryland being one of the hardest hit states. We summarized implementation of overdose prevention and response programs in Maryland and identified associations between opioid overdose deaths by jurisdiction in 2019 and implementation of overdose programs by 2021. Data on program implementation are from Maryland's Opioid Operational Command Center (OOCC) Program Inventory. OOCC coordinates the state's response to overdose, and their Program Inventory tracks implementation of 145 programs across 12 domains (e.g., public health, education, and judiciary), including 10 programs designed to broaden naloxone access. The level of program implementation was dichotomized as substantial implementation versus other levels (i.e., partial, planned, and none). We estimated associations between per capita opioid overdose deaths and substantial implementation of: all 145 programs in the Inventory, programs within each of 12 domains, and 10 naloxone programs. Data on program implementation and overdose mortality are summarized at the jurisdiction level. Across jurisdictions, the median proportion of programs with substantial implementation was 51% across all programs and 70% among naloxone programs. Overdose mortality was associated with subsequent substantial implementation of programs within the public health domain (p = .04), but not in the other 11 domains. We did not find evidence that per capita overdose deaths in 2019 spurred overdose program implementation by 2021, with the exception of public health programs. The OOCC Program Inventory is a novel way to track implementation across jurisdictions. Findings can inform the implementation and evaluation of overdose programs in other jurisdictions across the United States.Overdose mortality in the United States continues to climb, with Maryland being one of the hardest hit states. We summarized implementation of overdose prevention and response programs in Maryland and identified associations between opioid overdose deaths by jurisdiction in 2019 and implementation of overdose programs by 2021. Data on program implementation are from Maryland's Opioid Operational Command Center (OOCC) Program Inventory. OOCC coordinates the state's response to overdose, and their Program Inventory tracks implementation of 145 programs across 12 domains (e.g., public health, education, and judiciary), including 10 programs designed to broaden naloxone access. The level of program implementation was dichotomized as substantial implementation versus other levels (i.e., partial, planned, and none). We estimated associations between per capita opioid overdose deaths and substantial implementation of: all 145 programs in the Inventory, programs within each of 12 domains, and 10 naloxone programs. Data on program implementation and overdose mortality are summarized at the jurisdiction level. Across jurisdictions, the median proportion of programs with substantial implementation was 51% across all programs and 70% among naloxone programs. Overdose mortality was associated with subsequent substantial implementation of programs within the public health domain (p = .04), but not in the other 11 domains. We did not find evidence that per capita overdose deaths in 2019 spurred overdose program implementation by 2021, with the exception of public health programs. The OOCC Program Inventory is a novel way to track implementation across jurisdictions. Findings can inform the implementation and evaluation of overdose programs in other jurisdictions across the United States.

Details

1007527
Journal classification
Substance
Supplemental data
Indexing method: Automated
Title
Implementation of Overdose Prevention in Maryland: Implications for Resource Allocation, Program Scale-Up, and Evaluation
Author
Tomko, Catherine 1   VIAFID ORCID Logo  ; Rouhani, Saba 1 ; Johnson, Renee M 1   VIAFID ORCID Logo  ; Susukida, Ryoko 1 ; Byregowda, Himani 1 ; Parnham, Taylor 1 ; Schneider, Kristin E 1 ; Gibson, Marianne 2 ; Heath, Teresa 2 ; Rickard, Robin 2 ; Boyd, Christine E 3 ; Park, Ju Nyeong 4 

 Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA 
 Maryland Opioid Operational Command Center, Baltimore, MD, USA 
 Maryland Department of Health, Baltimore, MD, USA 
 Alpert Medical School, Brown University, Providence, RI, USA 
Correspondence author
Publication title
Journal abbreviation
Health Promot Pract
Volume
26
Issue
2
Pages
332-341
Publication year
2025
Country of publication
UNITED STATES
ISSN
1524-8399
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Peer reviewed
Yes
Format availability
Internet
Language of publication
English
Record type
Journal Article
Publication history
 
 
Online publication date
2023-11-22
Publication note
Print-Electronic
Publication history
 
 
   First posting date
22 Nov 2023
   Accepted date
21 Apr 2025
   Revised date
21 Apr 2025
21 Apr 2025
   First submitted date
22 Nov 2023
Medline document status
MEDLINE
Electronic publication date
2023-11-22
PubMed ID
37991198
ProQuest document ID
2892660200
Document URL
https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/implementation-overdose-prevention-maryland/docview/2892660200/se-2?accountid=208611
Last updated
2025-04-22
Database
ProQuest One Academic