Buprenorphine prescribing comfort level among family medicine providers post MAT and MATE Acts.

Lai, Benjamin, Jonathan Good, Jason O’Grady, and David Rushlow. 2025. “Buprenorphine Prescribing Comfort Level Among Family Medicine Providers Post MAT and MATE Acts.”. Journal of Opioid Management 21 (5): 373-76.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the percentage of family medicine providers in our institution on completing the 8-hour required training on opioid and substance use disorders 14 months after introduction of the Medication Access and Training Expansion (MATE) Act and to evaluate buprenorphine prescribing attitudes.

DESIGN/SETTING: An anonymized survey was electronically sent to all family medicine providers in a single institution in Minnesota, spanning five outpatient and two express care clinics. Survey was deployed for 2 weeks, August 26-September 8, 2024.

OUTCOME MEASURES: Provider completion of MATE Act training and comfort level in prescribing buprenorphine for opioid use disorder (OUD).

RESULTS: A total of 41 out of 127 providers completed the survey (31.5 percent). Although 76 percent respondents completed the training, only half felt comfortable seeing patients with OUD on buprenorphine, writing a bridge prescription, or initiating buprenorphine.

CONCLUSIONS: Findings suggest that elimination of the x-waiver and enactment of required training are insufficient to positively affect buprenorphine prescribing comfort level.

Last updated on 10/22/2025
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