Objectives: As xylazine increasingly adulterates the unregulated opioid supply, people who use drugs (PWUD) are more likely to experience sequalae from xylazine. Given xylazine exposure is consistently associated with development of wounds which can heal with medically directed wound care, we sought to understand the level of preparedness and ability of front-line addiction professionals who interact with PWUD to provide wound care treatment.
Methods: We administered a 26-item online survey assessing participant and organizational characteristics, level of wound care training, ability to test for xylazine and treat xylazine-associated wounds, and funding and billing characteristics to a national sample of addiction professionals using a listserv of over 11,000 individuals.
Results: We had a response rate of 12.8% in which 1,280 met eligibility criteria and completed the survey, with the majority (23.7%) being nurses. While nearly all participants had cared for patients who had experienced any xylazine-associated harms, less than half (43.6%) had cared for patients with xylazine wounds and 43.4% had any training or certification in wound care, including 26.9% of physicians. Although 75.9% of participants had access to wound care supplies, just 19.5% provided wound care services onsite.
Conclusions: Most addiction professionals, especially physicians, lack wound care training and do not provide onsite treatment for drug-associated wounds at the organizational level. There is a critical need to bridge this gap in knowledge and build capacity to provide evidence-based wound care services to PWUD in areas impacted by xylazine adulteration.
Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc.