Thesis Defence: Juls Budau (Master of Social Work)

Date
to
Location
Small Lecture Theatre Agora (7-150) and/or Zoom
Campus
Prince George
Online

You are encouraged to attend the defence. The details of the defence and attendance information is included below:  

Date: June 20, 2025   
Time: 11:00 AM to 1:00 PM (PT)

Defence mode: Hybrid
In-Person Attendance: Small Lecture Theatre Agora (7-150), UNBC Prince George Campus  
Virtual Attendance: via Zoom 

LINK TO JOIN: Please contact the Office of Graduate Administration for information regarding remote attendance for online defences. 

To ensure the defence proceeds with no interruptions, please mute your audio and video on entry and do not inadvertently share your screen. The meeting will be locked to entry 5 minutes after it begins: please ensure you are on time.  

Thesis entitled: WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO YOU WHEN YOU SAY “IT WORKS”? USER PERSPECTIVES ON STIMULANT AGONIST THERAPY (STAT)

Abstract: Since the 2016 declaration of the overdose crisis in British Columbia (BC), over 16,000 people have died from using the toxic drug supply (BC Coroners Service, 2025). Although the driver of this public health crisis is illicit fentanyl, users of drugs beyond opioids are impacted. For instance, after fentanyl, the second and third-most detected substances within posthumous toxicology testing are cocaine and methamphetamine. These fatality cases are likely either users of both illicit opioids and stimulants who succumbed to an unpredictable dose of the former substance, or opioid-naive stimulant users unintentionally exposed to fentanyl cross-contamination. In either case, at least half of those dying from unregulated drugs are using stimulants. Because of this, in order to reduce exposure to the toxic drug supply, pharmacological alternatives to stimulants should be explored.

One potential intervention is stimulant agonist therapy (STAT): pharmaceutical stimulants commonly prescribed to treat attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) used to replace or control the use of illicit stimulants. STAT options were included in provincial prescribed safer supply (PSS) guidelines first released in 2020. Presently, less than 10% of PSS patients receive stimulants. Prescribers have decried a lack of evidence, citing meta-reviews for randomized clinical trials (RCTs) for stimulant replacement therapy (SRT) that show limited efficacy. However, not only do these meta-reviews include RCTs for a number of non-stimulant medications, but are the tested outcomes of these RCTs congruent with lived successes of STAT patients?

To explore this question, ten STAT patients throughout BC were recruited between October 2021 and February 2022 to participate in remote semi-structured qualitative interviews that focused on what it meant to them for STAT “to work”. For most participants, using STAT in preferred formulation, dosage, and route of administration resulted in significant increases in quality of life, including functionality, mental wellness, connection, and paid employment, as well as reduced illicit stimulant use. Notably, despite these changes, almost none would be successful RCT participants, as even occasional illicit stimulant use would disqualify them from the primary measure of evaluation: drug cessation within the study period. 

This research reveals patterns and strategies of successful STAT use that contradict the design of SRT RCTs and challenge their relevancy as evidence against STAT, as well as interrogates the methodological appropriateness of RCTs to evaluate the effectiveness of STAT at all.

Defence Committee:  
Chair: Dr. Greg Halseth, University of Northern British Columbia  
Supervisor: Dr. Susan Burke, University of Northern British Columbia  
Committee Member: Dr. Dawn Hemingway, University of Northern British Columbia  
Committee Member: Dr. Luke Harris, University of Northern British Columbia  
External Examiner: Dr. Catherine Whalen, University of Northern British Columbia  

Contact Information

Graduate Administration in the Office of the Registrar, University of Northern British Columbia