VCU student-led project supports patients in recovery from opioid use disorder
Severe dental problems have been linked to buprenorphine, and those oral health issues, in addition to spurring other medical conditions, can become life-threatening on their own. Led by VCU School of Pharmacy students, a recent initiative – dubbed the Resilient Smile Project – is aiming to both help patients maintain their oral health and educate health care providers about addressing buprenorphine’s side effects.
In 2022, the Food and Drug Administration recognized that tooth loss and decay could accompany use of the medication, and concern has grown. Despite these concerns, the benefit of buprenorphine outweighs these risks.
“When they first released that announcement in 2022, there weren’t any cases reported of death caused by dental complications,” said Christian Moon, a second-year Pharm.D. candidate in the School of Pharmacy whose interests include public health and psychiatric conditions. “As we looked at that again with the same criteria, in 2024, we noticed a rise in cases of death, indicating the issue has gotten worse.”
Moon is vice president of VCU’s student chapter of the American Association of Psychiatric Pharmacists, and the student group had been considering the buprenorphine issue with its advisor, Ericka Crouse, Pharm.D. She is an associate professor in the School of Pharmacy’s Department of Pharmacotherapy and Outcome Sciences, and she specializes in psychiatric pharmacy and substance use disorders.
Moon led the formation of Resilient Smile, and the project team made up of School of Pharmacy students recruited students from across the VCU health sciences enterprise, including the schools of Medicine, Nursing and Dentistry, as well as the College of Health Professions and VCU Graduate School to participate in the two service days this month, assembling 250 dental care kits.
The kits – which contain ultra-soft bristle toothbrushes, gentle toothpaste, mouthwash, dental floss, sanitary wipes and educational pamphlets – are being distributed to five area pharmacies and clinics that serve individuals with opioid use disorders: Bremo Pharmacy, Daily Planet, Verity Psychiatry, Richmond Behavioral Health Authority via Westwood Pharmacy, and VCU Health’s Motivate Clinic, which offers a full spectrum of addiction-related services.
“From a health professional perspective, it helps bring an early introduction to keep an eye out” for oral health issues among clients – and to educate and guide them, said Taylor Mitchell, a second-year Pharm.D. student and the Resilient Smile Project service chair.
She added that monitoring buprenorphine’s benefits and side effects must be a team effort: “Doctors are the ones prescribing the medication. Dentists are the ones that are able to see the decline in oral health. And then pharmacists are the ones that are filling the prescription and are able to talk to the patients about the medication.”
Reflecting that interdisciplinary spirit, the project’s approach grew through coordination with leaders from the Center of Interprofessional Education course for health sciences students. Moon coordinated with IPEC leaders to broaden its outreach throughout VCU’s health sciences community.
At this month’s service days, the students learned from Crouse about opioid use disorder – from how drug treatments intersect with oral health to a larger, more sobering truth.
“The opioid crisis has been going on for a while now,” she said. “Overdose is one of the top reasons people in the 18- to 35-year-old age group are dying these days.”
Crouse and Moon secured a grant from the national AAPP’s Collegiate Chapter Impact Grants program to support Resilient Smile and received a donation from Verity Pharmacy for the program. Moon is looking forward to sharing results of the VCU’s buprenorphine initiative at AAPP’s national conference in April.
“My hope here is to be able to start facilitating further conversations,” he said. “We’ll be able to further put a light on the issue that is getting worse. … It’s not just a pharmacist perspective that we should be tackling it from. It’s the entire health care team.”
From the VCU student team, undergraduate dental hygiene senior Natasha Smith is president of the campus chapter of the American Dental Hygienists Association, and she was Resilient Smile’s point person for the School of Dentistry. She helped identify items for the oral hygiene kits and secured donations of supplies from on and off campus.
Smith said she and her classmates joined the project in part to reflect how dental hygienists play crucial roles in patient care, including discussions of how pharmacology intersects with oral health.
“We go beyond prevention and ‘just cleanings’ to offer comprehensive dental care,” Smith said. “A big focus is education, so taking the time with these patients, educating them – it’s a good effort to help everybody be on the same page.”
Subscribe to VCU News
Subscribe to VCU News at newsletter.vcu.edu and receive a selection of stories, videos, photos, news clips and event listings in your inbox.
Latest Health & medicine
- ‘Like a family’: Orthopaedics mentorship network supports aspiring surgeonsFor students interested in orthopaedic surgery, dedicated residents and faculty guide them through research and toward the highly competitive specialty.
- Class of 2025: Health Ph.D. was a harmonious fit for speech language pathologist Megan CrawfordThe working professional (and devoted singer) marks a first for the College of Health Professions program, and her research into swallowing disorders embraces an interdisciplinary lens.
- VCU School of Public Health hosts inaugural lecture in memory of late professorThe first Dr. David Wheeler Memorial Lecture in Spatial and Cancer Statistics honored the VCU professor, a prolific, pioneering researcher who died last year.
- Researchers may have solved decades-old mystery behind benzodiazepine side effectsIdentifying a key protein’s role could improve the common mental health medications and point to new treatments for inflammation-related diseases, VCU medicinal chemist Youzhong Guo says.
- ‘The humanities humanize us’: Students explore patient care through artLed by School of Medicine and School of Arts faculty, the Medicine, Art and Humanities elective invites first-year medical students to the intersection of culture and medicine.
- ‘It feels real’: Simulation training provides safe and realistic environment for learnersAt VCU’s Center for Human Simulation and Patient Safety, current and future physicians get hands-on clinical experience and practice soft skills that translate into improved patient care.