Expand Perinatal Treatment and Support for Women with SUDs

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Return to  Opioid Top-Level Strategy Map or ZOOM MAP - Expand Steps to Minimize Opioid Use During Pregnancy or Pregnancy during Opioid Use

Background

Most doctors recommend that pregnant women undergo a long-term treatment plan called drug-assisted stabilization using methadone, also known as harm reduction therapy. This treatment remains sustainable for a woman after she has given birth, because it's covered under Medicaid, so new mothers can still access the treatment, even after their six-week Medicaid-provided postnatal care is done. The treatment also doesn't subject a woman's mind and body through the stress of full withdrawal, allowing her to focus on caring for herself and her baby

Promising Programs

Perinatal Addiction Treatment Program


Perinatal Addiction Treatment Program - Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center
Program Highlights

  • Integrated Care Model: Includes maternity care, substance use treatment, behavioral health/psychiatry, pediatrics
  • Participant Drive Design
  • Private setting 10 minutes from hospital campus
  • Tablet-based SBIRT screening
  • 18 week parenting class

Outcome Successes

  • Perinatal: Average gestational age is over 38 weeks; Average birthweight in the normal range
  • Decreased NAS treatment rate
  • Decreased neonatal LOS
  • Effective use of technology for screening
  • 2/3 of participants remain in treatment postpartum

 

Centering Pregnancy

While not specifically focusing on issues of addiction or substance misuse among pregnant women, the CenteringPregnancy approach has the potential to cost-effectively improve prenatal and perinatal care among women who may be using or be addicted to opioids or other substances. It is a group approach to prenatal and perinatal care. 
 

Tools & Resources

TR - Expand Perinatal Treatment for Women with SUDs


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