Safe Medicines: True Crime and Medicine Safety
In this episode of the PSM Podcast, host Shabbir Imber Safdar sits down with Jeffrey Bratberg, Clinical Professor of Pharmacy Practice and Clinical Research at the University of Rhode Island College of Pharmacy, to explore a groundbreaking model for expanding access to treatment for opioid use disorder. Dr. Bratberg shares how his early work in infectious disease and harm reduction, particularly expanding access to Narcan, led him to a larger question: why are life-saving addiction medications still so hard to access when pharmacies are located within five miles of most Americans? The conversation centers on an innovative pilot program that allows patients to walk into a community pharmacy and begin treatment with buprenorphine the same day. Instead of waiting weeks for a specialist appointment or navigating complex referral systems, individuals ready for help can leave the pharmacy with medication in hand. Outcomes from this work, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, showed strong patient retention and overwhelming preference for pharmacy-based care. The episode highlights how reducing friction at the critical moment when someone decides to seek treatment can dramatically change trajectories for individuals and families affected by opioid use disorder. Shabbir and Dr. Bratberg also discuss the policy and payment barriers that still limit pharmacists’ ability to practice at the top of their training. From collaborative practice agreements to inconsistent reimbursement models, the regulatory landscape varies widely by state. Through the PharmacyBridge initiative, Dr. Bratberg and his colleagues are mapping these barriers and promoting best practices to help scale pharmacy-based addiction care nationwide. Learn more about Dr. Bratberg's work at https://www.pharmacybridge.org/ [https://www.pharmacybridge.org/]. Visit https://www.safemedicines.org/ [https://www.safemedicines.org/] to learn more about drug safety and see our other podcasts!
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