Tuesday 11/9

8:00 am PT – 3:30 pm PT

See video from Day 2

8:00 am PT - 8:05 am PT

Welcoming remarks

 

PRESENTERS

Mary Pittman, DrPH
President and CEO, Public Health Institute

Carmen R. Nevarez, MD, MPH
Sr. Vice President, Public Health Institute
Director, Center for Health Leadership and Practice and National Overdose Prevention Network

OPENING KEYNOTE
8:05 am PT - 9:15 am PT

4 Big Ideas – Applying learnings from COVID to the U.S. approach to the overdose crisis

 

+ SESSION DESCRIPTION

As an infectious disease specialist with a special focus on SUD, Dr. Barocas will share his observations about what was successful in responding to COVID and offer insights on how to apply the most promising practices to the broad challenges of the national crisis of substance use disorder and its tremendous death toll. The reactor panel will share their insights on how important these observations are and how they would apply to their sector.

PRESENTER

Joshua A. Barocas, MD
Associate Professor of Medicine, School of Medicine, University of Colorado

REACTOR PANEL

Eric Gebbie, DrPH, MVA
Interim Director of Emergency Operations, Public Health Division, Oregon Health Authority

Treat an emergency like an emergency

Josh Sharfstein, MD
Vice Dean for Public Health Practice and Community Engagement, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

Mobilize the healthcare system

Karen Scott, MD, MPH
President, FORE Foundation

Follow the evidence and invest in rapid innovation

Gary Tsai, MD
Director, Substance Abuse Prevention and Control, County of Los Angeles, Dept of Public Health

Pay attention to equity

PLENARY SESSION
9:15 am PT - 10:15 am PT

Understanding Opioid DATA from multiple perspectives

 

+ SESSION DESCRIPTION

Several agencies collect opioid and other drug use and overdose data with differing specificity, timelines, and purpose. This panel will focus on 3 very different tools and approaches for understanding the data and will offer examples of use.

Mark Karandang from northern California HIDTA will demonstrate the ODMAP tool and give examples of how it has been used to coordinate timely collaboration across sectors to stop overdose outbreaks.

Dr. Dasgupta will show how using a variety of surveillance tools, epidemiology and experience gained in the real world can help to advance drug safety science.

Dr. Seth will demonstrate the role that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention utilizes multiple data sets to provide high quality more timely, overdose mortality and morbidity data to inform prevention and response efforts.

PRESENTERS

Mark Anthony Karandang
Drug Intelligence Officer and Demand Reduction Coordinator, Overdose Response Strategy, Northern California High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area

ODMAP

Nabarun Dasgupta, PhD, MPH
Senior Scientist, Injury Prevention Research Center Innovation Fellow, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Opioid Data Lab

Puja Seth, PhD
Chief, Epidemiology and Surveillance Branch, Division of Overdose Prevention, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Overdose Data to Action

MODERATOR

Ken Shatzkes, PhD
Senior Program Officer, FORE Foundation

CONCURRENT SESSIONS
10:25 am PT - 11:20 am PT

 

SPECIAL WORKSHOP

Maternal Child Health in Justice Systems

+ SESSION DESCRIPTION

Women with SUD who are justice involved and their families need advocacy, strategies, and support in order to move towards recovery and thrive. With experience managing the Forensic Services Program at the Philadelphia Health Management Corporation, Laurie will enlist the involvement of the attendees in a dialogue to identify strategies, solutions, and opportunities for innovation to better serve the woman who are justice involved using the lens that criminal justice is a public health concern for all of us.

PRESENTER

Laurie A Corbin, MSS, MLSP
Managing Director for Community Engagement, Public Health Management Corporation


Understanding and Bolstering the Recovery Workforce: Findings from In-Depth Discussions with Peer Recovery Coaches

 

+ SESSION DESCRIPTION

As people with lived experience of addiction and recovery, peer recovery coaches (PRCs) are often the lynchpin to engaging people in opioid use disorder (OUD) treatment and helping them rebuild their lives. Many states, as well as healthcare and recovery organizations, have significantly increased the use of this workforce over the past decade.

The Foundation for Opioid Response Efforts (FORE) is engaged in efforts to explore the unique challenges and experiences of PRCs across the United States so that a strong, effective workforce is developed. This session will focus on findings from a national qualitative study of peers, conducted by FORE in partnership with survey firm SSRS.

FORE plans to use the findings from this qualitative study of 47 PRCs to launch a larger, quantitative study examining the PRC workforce in different states across the nation. Hearing directly from PRCs about the supports and training they need to reach their highest potential and have a positive impact on people in treatment and recovery should be a critical component of developing policies to expand this workforce.

PRESENTERS

Ken Shatzkes, PhD
Senior Program Officer, Foundation for Opioid Response Efforts

Cortney Lovell
Partner and Co-founder, Our Wellness Collective

Tommie Trevino
Substance Use Navigator and Supervisor, University of California, Davis Medical Center

MODERATOR

Karen A. Scott, MD, MPH
President, Foundation for Opioid Response Efforts


Issues for Native and Indigenous communities

 

+ SESSION DESCRIPTION

The COVID-19 pandemic has represented changes and challenges for tribal opioid overdose prevention programs. At the same time, the process of addressing COVID-19 created new opportunities and pathways to prevention, treatment, recovery, and support care coordination.

Dr. Parker will describe the COVID-19-induced and telehealth-specific programmatic practices that support delivery of Substance Use Disorder / Opioid Use Disorder (SUD/OUD) - Opioid Overdose Prevention (OOP) services among tribal programs, tribal epidemiology centers (TECs) and urban Indian organizations during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Lori Nesbitt serves as a tribal court advocate for Yurok Tribe Opioid Response Program, a program of the Yurok Tribe Wellness Court. She will speak about how the program focuses on education, case management, prevention, youth-based activities, and demonstrates how a rural tribal community responded to COVID and reached more members with SUD.

PRESENTER

Myra Parker, JD, MPH, PhD
CEO, Seven Directions

New findings from Promising Practices in SUD for Tribal communities

Lori Nesbitt
Yurok Opioid Program Manager, Yurok Tribe, Humboldt and Del Norte Counties, Northern California

MODERATOR

Michael Bird, MSW, MPH
Past-president, American Public Health Association (APHA)


Innovations that prevent overdose

+ SESSION DESCRIPTION

Dr. Gene Hern will speak about the Contra Costa County Pilot: EMS as an entry-point to addiction treatment, and present four novel approach strategies that involve first responders.

Josh Luftig, PA-C, will discuss how to better enlist the entire emergency department team in the life-saving work of distributing naloxone to high-risk patients. He will also describe how to expand a low-barrier, 24/7 program statewide.

Dr. Ben Zaniello will show how consistent care for MAT treatment can be monitored and improved by using cloud-based technology.

PRESENTERS

Gene Hern, MD, EMS
Associate Clinical Professor, University of California San Francisco, Vice Chair of Education, Emergency Medicine, Alameda County

Engaging EMS as part of treatment team

Josh Luftig, PA-C
Bay Area Regional Director, California Bridge Program 

How the ED can be a major partner in addiction treatment programs

Ben Zaniello, MD, MPH
Chief Medical Officer, Point/Click/Care 

Facilitating treatment using cloud-based technology.

MODERATOR

Ben Zaniello, MD, MPH
Chief Medical Officer, Point/Click/Care 

11:20 am PT - 12:00 pm PT

Break

CONCURRENT SESSIONS
12:00 pm PT - 12:55 pm PT

 

SPECIAL WORKSHOP

Treatment & Recovery; systems designed to meet women where they are (workshop is especially relevant for those in rural areas)

+ SESSION DESCRIPTION

Women, particularly women who are being given care and attention through prenatal care, find systems may fail them if they have concurrent SUD. Dr. Shogren will show how systems can be designed and linked to address the broader group of issues and disconnections that commonly occur when women cycle through various systems designed to treat a specific life phase but that can drop off in supporting SUD recovery. She will also bring valuable experience gained from working in rural communities.

PRESENTER

Maridee ​Shogren, DNP, CNM, CLC
Clinical Professor, College of Nursing and Professional Disciplines, University of North Dakota


+ SESSION DESCRIPTION

ODMAP provides near real-time suspected overdose surveillance data across jurisdictions to support public safety and public health efforts. With this information, they can mobilize an immediate response to a sudden increase, or spike in overdose events by linking first responders and relevant record management systems to a mapping tool to track overdoses to stimulate real-time response and strategic analysis across jurisdictions. This workshop will cover principles of the tool and give some examples of how ODMAP has been implemented and document its value in selected cases.

PRESENTERS

Mark Anthony Karandang
Drug Intelligence Officer/Demand Reduction Coordinator, Overdose Response Strategy/Northern CA HIDTA

ODMAP

Marquis Johnson
ODMAP Coordinator / Washington Baltimore, High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area (HIDTA)

Sarah Ali, MPH
Overdose Response Strategy Program Coordinator and ODMAP Liaison, CDC Foundation


Accelerating Improvement: Using improvement science tools to transform ED practices for better outcomes

 

+ SESSION DESCRIPTION

The Emergency Quality (E-QUAL) Network is designed to accelerate knowledge translation by disseminating evidence-based practices in a low-burden, high-impact way. The E-QUAL Opioid Initiative aims to reduce opioid associated harm through safer prescribing and the implementation of evidence-based interventions. Since 2018, the E-QUAL Opioid Initiative has engaged over 800 EDs and 5,400 emergency clinicians in applying evidence-based quality improvement (QI) interventions to reduce opioid-associated harm. This session will illustrate the E-QUAL Opioid Initiative process, ED participants’ improvements in pain management and opioid use disorder care, and how the combination of data and QI tools facilitate practice transformation.

PRESENTER

Arjun Venkatesh MD, MBA, MHS
Associate Professor and Chief of Administration Section, Department of Emergency Medicine at Yale University, E-QUAL co-Lead

Kathryn Hawk, MD
Assistant Professor, Yale Department of Emergency Medicine, Yale School of Public Health, Program in Addiction Medicine

Arianna Campbell, PA-C
Director, Co-Principal Investigator, California Bridge

PLENARY SESSION
1:25 pm PT - 2:10 pm PT


Integrating Prevention Practices into the Justice System

 

+ SESSION DESCRIPTION

Opioid Response Network clinical expert Dr. Brian Fuehrlein will present on the physiology of substance use disorders, link disease misunderstanding to stigma and overdose prevention, harm reduction and ongoing treatment strategies for individuals with opioid use disorders. He will also provide information and his perspective as an addiction psychiatrist on opportunities within the Opioid Response Network (see below) system to gain evidence-based training and education for individuals, organizations and communities who are working with or within systems that may have limited access to such trainings. A particular focus will include reviewing opportunities to improve substance use disorder management for incarcerated individuals and highlight points for a more seamless approach to services that support those who are managed by the justice system.

The Opioid Response Network (ORN) is a Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration-funded coalition led by the American Academy of Addiction Psychiatry working collaboratively with the Addiction Technology Transfer Center, at the University of Missouri - Kansas City, Columbia University Division on Substance Use Disorders and 40 national professional organizations. ORN provides education and training at no cost to enhance efforts addressing the opioid crisis and stimulant use disorders. Anyone can submit a request for help at OpioidResponseNetwork.org

PRESENTER

Brian Fuehrlein, MD, PhD
Associate Professor of Psychiatry; Director, Psychiatric Emergency Room, VA Connecticut Healthcare System, American Academy of Addiction Psychiatry (AAAP)

PLENARY SESSION
2:10 pm PT - 2:55 pm PT

Fentanyl Changes the Landscape

 

+ SESSION DESCRIPTION

Fentanyl is being imported in vast quantities and increasingly being incorporated into products that impact individuals using drugs many of whom are uninformed about the consequences. This session will provide up-to-date information from the DEA about illicit Fentanyl trafficking trends and measures being taken to reduce the risk to the public. The session will also bring the experience of working with individuals in the emergency department who are unprepared for fentanyl contamination. Implications for treatment and prevention will be discussed as well as the additional hazards posed in a mixed drug environment.

PRESENTERS

Richard Lucey
Senior Prevention Program Manager, Community Outreach and Prevention Support Section, Drug Enforcement Administration

What the fentanyl environment looks like now

Andrew Herring, MD
Medical Director, Highland General Hospital SUD Treatment Program, CA Bridge Program

Dynamics of population changes and treatment challenges in face of more available fentanyl

CLOSING KEYNOTE
2:55 pm PT - 3:25 pm PT

Activating community for health justice. Nothing about us without us.

 

PRESENTER

Regina LaBelle, JD
Director, O’Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law, Georgetown University

3:30pm PT - 4:30 pm PT

Virtual Networking Hour (optional)

Plan to meet with other conference attendees according to geographic region and/or topic area in virtual networking rooms.