Dayton Daily News

AI may be able to help fight the opioid crisis

- By Joel White Joel White is the executive director of the Opioid Safety Alliance. He wrote this for InsideSour­ces.com.

What if we could bring the powerful disruptive force of AI, artificial intelligen­ce, to bear in the fight against the devastatin­g opioid epidemic, which continues to claim 130 lives each day in the United States alone?

Earlier this year, the Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n released findings showing that machine learning — a type of AI — is actually better at predicting patients’ risk of an opioid overdose than other methods in use.

The study showed that machine-learning based algorithms could better avoid targeting patients who were not truly at risk of misuse and concluded that this technology “appear(s) to be a valuable and feasible tool” in the fight against this deadly public health crisis.

That is the same idea behind one of our chief policy goals at the Opioid Safety Alliance: something we call a “Prescripti­on Safety Alert System.” The idea is simple:

Today, when doctors and pharmacist­s are writing or filling a prescripti­on for opioid medication­s, they lack a complete, well-working tool to make sure their patient has not received the medication elsewhere in recent days.

States have relegated clinicians to Prescripti­on Drug Monitoring Programs — or PDMPs — to check for past opioid fills. While important, they are far from perfect. PDMPs often operate outside of clinicians’ workflow, are not updated in real time, and often do not work across state lines, among other issues.

In 2019, facing an emergency of this caliber, we must do more.

Our Prescripti­on Safety Alert System, delineated in bipartisan legislatio­n called the ALERT Act of 2019, complement­s the work of PDMPs by leveraging the power of AI to stem this awful tide of opioid misuse.

Introduced by Congresswo­man Annie Kuster, D-New Hampshire, and Congressma­n Markwayne Mullin, R-Oklahoma, the bill directs the Trump administra­tion to contract with the private sector to establish an alert system populated with existing prescripti­on and dispensing data — this is where AI comes in to play.

Each time an opioid is dispensed, the system would review the patient’s prescripti­on history and develop a clinical risk score that can inform dispensers when a patient could be pharmacy shopping or otherwise at risk of harm — all before the medication crosses the pharmacy counter.

The input is human led, the output is true AI; using 21st century technology to analyze patients’ opioid histories without aid and determine their risk of misuse in real time.

Importantl­y, this data would be made available only for clinical use and would be subject to HIPAA protection­s, thereby upholding patients’ privacy. We have proposed that patient privacy could be further strengthen­ed by applying blockchain technology to this alert system, ensuring that sensitive informatio­n remains secure.

The federal government has devoted nearly $11 billion to the opioid epidemic in the last two years alone. Americans can agree this is a worthy cause but, to date, much of this funding is allocated for resources that reach patients after opioid misuse takes its toll.

Our Prescripti­on Safety Alert System — and the ALERT Act that would bring it to fruition — treats this crisis at its source; allowing for a clinical interventi­on before an inappropri­ate fill of opioid medication ever crosses the pharmacy counter.

This is about much more than showcasing recent technology. It is about saving human lives.

 ??  ?? White
White

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States