MDOI International Journal of Multidisciplinary Studies and Innovative Researchs 110.0222/INT.2026.00196
110.0222/INT.2026.00196
Article

Initiating Medications During Hospitalization and Strategies for Ensuring Linkage at Discharge for Patients With Opioid Use Disorder: A Scoping Review

Austin Dryscha, Kathryn Fink, Nikhil Sriram, Marianne Kanaris, Scott Wu, Deep Upadhyaya, Katherine Welter, Lisa Blankenship, Melissa Bregger, Kelli Scott, Brent Schnipke, Ashti Doobay-Persaud 2025 International Journal of Multidisciplinary Studies and Innovative Researchs

Abstract

Hospitalization presents a critical opportunity to initiate medications for opioid use disorder (MOUD) and improve long-term outcomes for patients with opioid use disorder (OUD). While inpatient MOUD initiation significantly reduces mortality and relapse, many patients lack appropriate follow-up care after discharge. This scoping review synthesizes evidence from 52 studies on hospital discharge practices for patients with OUD initiated on MOUD to identify best practices that support continued treatment and recovery. Inpatient addiction consultation services, standardized protocols, and clinician education emerged as key facilitators of MOUD initiation. Transitional care strategies, such as bridge clinics, peer navigation, telemedicine, and structured discharge planning, were associated with increased outpatient linkage, reduced readmissions, and improved retention in treatment. Despite policy advances including X-waiver elimination, systemic barriers persist and disproportionately affect rural and minoritized populations. Multidisciplinary, patient-centered discharge pathways that integrate medical treatment with social support are critical. Effective linkage strategies must address both structural and individual barriers to care. We propose six pillars of MOUD continuity, including early initiation, warm handoffs, peer support, bridge care models, telemedicine integration, and attention to social determinants. Implementing these strategies is essential to closing care gaps and improving outcomes in the evolving landscape of MOUD treatment.

Identifier Metadata

Identifier 110.0222/INT.2026.00196
Canonical mdoi:110.0222/INT.2026.00196
Resolver URL https://mdoi.org/110.0222/INT.2026.00196
Resource URL Open resource
Document URL Open document
Content Type Article
Authors Austin Dryscha, Kathryn Fink, Nikhil Sriram, Marianne Kanaris, Scott Wu, Deep Upadhyaya, Katherine Welter, Lisa Blankenship, Melissa Bregger, Kelli Scott, Brent Schnipke, Ashti Doobay-Persaud
Year 2025
Depositor International Journal of Multidisciplinary Studies and Innovative Researchs Organisation
Prefix 110.0222
Registered June 19, 2026
Updated June 19, 2026
Status Active
Visibility Public

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