New study will examine drug use and barriers to treatment in three New England states, including Rhode Island

Researchers at UVM's medical school will work on a study focused on drug use and barriers to health services in New England.
Researchers at UVM’s medical school will work on a study focused on drug use and barriers to health services in New England.
University of Vermont Medical Center/Courtesy
Share
Researchers at UVM's medical school will work on a study focused on drug use and barriers to health services in New England.
Researchers at UVM’s medical school will work on a study focused on drug use and barriers to health services in New England.
University of Vermont Medical Center/Courtesy
New study will examine drug use and barriers to treatment in three New England states, including Rhode Island
Copy

Researchers from the University of Vermont and several other institutions this spring will launch a multi-year study focused on drug use and barriers to health services in New England.

The study will follow 1,200 people with substance use disorder across the three states — Vermont, Massachusetts and Rhode Island — for up to five years.

Researchers hope to track how people use state programs around HIV and hepatitis C prevention, needle exchanges, and the impacts of newer initiatives like overdose prevention centers, where people can use drugs under medical supervision. (Rhode Island is currently the only New England state with such a facility, though Burlington is working to open one.)

The study will also look at how rural settings affect drug use, said Dr. Devika Singh, associate professor of medicine at UVM’s Larner College of Medicine.

“Are other things that perhaps pertain to individuals in more isolated communities — underlying mental health, stressors, depression, anxiety — that are influencing well-being and then perhaps encouraging more substance use?” Singh said.

Researchers at the University of Vermont, Brown University and the University of California–San Diego will lead the study, which is funded by a $12 million grant from the National Institute on Drug Abuse, a federal research institution.

According to Singh, who’s leading the research at UVM, the goal is to recruit about 400 people in Vermont for the study. The researchers want to follow people who inject, snort or inhale drugs — not people who only use cannabis, alcohol or prescribed narcotics.

One aim of the work is to better understand the barriers to drug treatment, Singh said.

“Are there meaningful themes, including poverty in Vermont or racism?” Singh said. “Vermont, across the nation, has the second highest rate of homelessness, and so is that playing a relevant theme in terms of people accessing programs across the state?”

The Vermont portion of the study will mainly focus on Chittenden and Windham counties, because that’s where state health department data show higher rates of emergency department visits for opioid overdoses compared to the rest of the state, Singh said.

The researchers hope to begin the study this coming spring.

This story was originally published by Vermont Public. It was shared as part of the New England News Collaborative.

An independent monitor says the district and RIDE have met the terms of a 2023 settlement that required faster evaluations and placement for 3- to 5-year-olds with disabilities, effectively closing the federal class action case
Food insecurity is getting worse in Rhode Island, and the recent disruption of SNAP benefits is only partly to blame
Public health leader Amy Nunn talks about the ripple effects of federal policy shifts, the threat of SNAP cuts and rising insurance costs, and what Rhode Island can do to protect community health in the months ahead
Attorney General Peter Neronha is negotiating with Prospect Medical to keep the financially troubled hospitals open through the end of the year while a potential buyer works to finalize financing — or another steps in
Ørsted executives say they are ‘committed’ to finishing project despite financial headwinds
But D.C. federal judge’s ruling Tuesday means a major setback to the already struggling project