星空无限传媒 OLOL Partner to Broaden Treatment for Opioid Use Disorder
May 13, 2021
Through a growing partnership with Our Lady of the Lake (OLOL) Regional Medical Center, LSU Professor of Psychology Julia Buckner is helping to add critically needed behavioral health services for patients who misuse opioids and other substances. Her team has already helped hundreds of patients.

Opioid misuse is killing Louisiana residents. While Alabama leads the nation in opioid prescription rates, at around one per person, other Southern states like Louisiana, Mississippi, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Tennessee, and Kentucky have very high prescription rates also, far above the national average. Louisiana recently saw the nation鈥檚 steepest spike in drug-overdose deaths, 70% of which involved an opioid.
Louisiana saw the nation鈥檚 steepest spike in drug-overdose deaths between 2019 and 2020, and over 70% of those deaths involved an opioid, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). While access to treatment for opioid use disorder is limited in the state, access to opioids remains broad. In 2019, Louisiana providers wrote 75 opioid prescriptions for every 100 persons, compared to the national average of 47. In parishes such as Caddo, Evangeline, and Rapides, there are more active opioid prescriptions than there are residents, and parishes like East Baton Rouge, Iberia, Jefferson, Lafayette, Ouachita, Orleans, Richland, and St. Landry have exceptionally high prescription rates also.
Through treatment known as CBT, or cognitive behavioral therapy, Buckner aims to help patients become better managers of their own drug use and align behaviors with personal goals, going from misuse to use, or finding other ways to deal with pain.
鈥淎s the largest provider of mental health services in Baton Rouge, OLOL was an excellent facility for us to partner with,鈥 said Buckner. 鈥淥ur shared goal is to offer therapy to more patients in need, but also to train more mental health professionals, including our LSU clinical psychology graduate students, to help combat the opioid crisis and save lives.鈥
鈥淥ur shared goal is to offer therapy to more patients in need, but also to train more mental health professionals, including our LSU clinical psychology graduate students, to help combat the opioid crisis and save lives.鈥
Julia Buckner, professor of psychology 星空无限传媒
What makes opioid use disorder different from other types of substance abuse is the common connection with chronic pain as well as anxiety around pain. CBT takes the approach that thoughts, feelings, and behaviors are connected. By recognizing and purposefully changing your thoughts, you can change how you feel and behave. The treatment method is based on personal patterns and unique triggers; there is no one-size-fits-all solution, which makes CBT appropriate in diverse populations.
鈥淲e鈥檙e especially focused on bringing evidence-based treatment for opioid use disorder to underserved and high-needs populations, and that is certainly Baton Rouge,鈥 Buckner said. 鈥淲e want to reduce barriers to therapy.鈥
Now, as more people are receiving the vaccine, there is a gradual return to in-person treatment, although the team will continue to offer telehealth as an option.
OLOL is the largest provider of health care to low-income residents in the Greater Baton Rouge area. About 70% of the approximately 300 OLOL patients seen by Buckner鈥檚 team so far rely on Medicaid, Medicare, or are uninsured, and roughly 40% are persons of color. Buckner is careful to point out, however, that there is no 鈥渢ypical鈥 patient with opioid use disorder.

Opioid prescription rates per parish in Louisiana. For every 100 residents, there are more than 112 opioid prescriptions in Caddo, Evangeline, and Rapides (dark reddish-brown). Parishes like East Baton Rouge, Iberia, Jefferson, Lafayette, Ouachita, Orleans, Richland, and St. Landry don鈥檛 fall far behind with 82-112 prescriptions per person (bright red). In Bossier, Calcasieu, Claiborne, Franklin, LaSalle, Terrebonne, and St. Tammany (lighter red), the rate is 57-82, far above the national average of 47.
鈥 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
鈥淲e see people across the whole socio-economic spectrum,鈥 she said. 鈥淵ou simply cannot say who will misuse opioids, continuing to use despite experiencing problems, and who will not. And although there are trends鈥攚e see more patients who also suffer from anxiety, depression, PTSD, or chronic pain, for example鈥攖his doesn鈥檛 translate to predicting which individual may misuse opioids.鈥
鈥淲hile many start with legally prescribed pain medication and then maybe use more than what is prescribed to help manage their pain鈥攐r maybe their insurance doesn鈥檛 cover the medication and it becomes cheaper to get it other ways鈥攏ot everyone with chronic pain goes on to develop an opioid use disorder,鈥 Buckner continued.
The joint LSU-OLOL effort is now in what Buckner describes as a third phase. They started in 2019, before COVID-19, but had to rapidly shift to telehealth to continue to provide services to both established and new patients in 2020. However, they were able to continue to provide in-person therapy in the inpatient psychiatry unit. Now, as more people are receiving the vaccine, there is a gradual return to in-person treatment, although the team will continue to offer telehealth as an option.
鈥淭his is something we learned; we鈥檝e been pleasantly surprised at how successful we鈥檝e been with telehealth,鈥 Buckner said. 鈥淔or some, transportation is a big issue, so being able to access therapy using videoconferencing helps them access treatment. But some patients don鈥檛 have reliable access to Internet, which makes in-person therapy a better choice. It鈥檚 really up to the patient.鈥
The team is already working in three units at OLOL (the outpatient clinics, the medically assisted treatment clinic, and inpatient psychiatry) and is planning to expand to other units of the hospital to increase access to care.
Buckner received nearly $850,000 in support from the U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) for the work, which includes recruiting, training, and retaining three cohorts of three doctoral students in clinical psychology to gain experience in providing this kind of therapy.
鈥淭he hospital has been very supportive of us being there and our new goal is to figure out ways to help us stay there once the three-year HRSA grant expires over next year,鈥 Buckner said.