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Treatment Guidelines for Pregnant Native Women With Opioid Use Disorder

The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the IHS provide treatment recommendations for pregnant American Indian and Alaska Native women with opioid use disorder.


 

To provide better “culturally responsive” care, the IHS and American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) have announced new clinical recommendations for health care providers (HCPs) who treat Native American pregnant woman and women of childbearing age with opioid use disorder (OUD).

There are no current comprehensive guidelines to manage the care of pregnant women with opioid dependence who live in rural or remote communities, ACOG acknowledges. That absence, in addition to a lack of resources, lack of training in treating substance use disorder in pregnancy, and providers’ discomfort with opioid agonist therapy in pregnancy, has contributed to “wide variation in the quality of care these women receive.”

Disparities are particularly extreme for American Indian and Alaska Native women (AI/AN), ACOG notes. They have the highest risk of dying of prescription opioid overdose, and they face specific barriers to accessing treatment. For instance, there are few opioid treatment programs offering methadone treatment on tribal lands.

The new recommendations were developed in partnership with tribes and ACOG’s Committee on American Indian and Alaska Native Women’s Health, based on critical feedback from listening sessions and tribal consultations in the past year. The specific guidelines are tailored for Native women.

The committee recognizes, it says, the “necessary wide-ranging scope of treatment for OUD, especially among AI/AN childbearing women.” Key recommendations include strategies to avoid or minimize the use of opioids for pain management and encourage alternative pain therapies, such as physical therapy, acupuncture, and mindfulness-based therapy. In pregnancy, ACOG recommends that obstetric providers perform universal screening and brief intervention using a validated tool as early in prenatal care as possible.

Treatment may require management of co-occurring polysubstance use disorders; concomitant alcohol and methamphetamine use predominate in many tribal areas. HCPs also may need to offer personalized care that “acknowledges the contributions of intergenerational and personal trauma,” the guidelines say. Trauma-informed interdisciplinary approaches to posttraumatic stress disorder that engage tribal resources, social structures, and assets are “crucial to impactful care of opioid use disorder.”

The postpartum period is associated with a high rate of relapse, ACOG says. Histories of trauma, for instance, can exacerbate mood disorders. Moreover, substance use and overdose are increasingly being recognized as key contributors to pregnancy-associated death in the US; a disproportionate share of deaths are postpartum. Infants of untreated, depressed mothers demonstrate poor outcomes, including impaired motor adaptation and self-regulation, developmental delay, and higher arousal scores. The guidelines advise treating mothers and infants as dyads to improve the course of neonatal opioid withdrawal syndrome (NOWS). The proportion of infants with NOWS who need pharmacologic treatment has risen dramatically, the committee notes.

“[I]t is clear from our site visits and clinical experience,” the committee members note, “that adaptation of systems for integration and reach in rural settings is necessary, with potentially different needs and assets in Native and rural populations.” Native culture and traditions, they add, offer opportunities for community engagement and support that can be integrated into medical care for the women and their infants.

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