The first Columbus program to test a new robotic methadone assembly machine

Using a new automated dose assembly machine, Registered Nurse Siv Mao removes a tray of methadone doses that will be dispensed to people with opioid use disorders.  CompDrug made history by being the first opioid treatment program to go live using Zing, which assembles doses automatically.  The innovative machine offers the opportunity to reduce human error, assemble drug doses at a rapid pace, and allow nursing staff to focus on direct patient care.

Siv Mao’s wrists ached as he twisted the lids on bottle after bottle of methadone every day at work.

He would sit behind a window as patients approached, trying to chat with them and see how they were doing, while also focusing on measuring doses into bottles, printing and sticking labels, heat sealing them, and double-checking his work.

Now, Mao, a registered nurse at CompDrug, an opioid treatment program on the North Side, can take more time to talk to patients she sees nearly every day. Her wrist no longer hurts and she can even get out of her chair all day, which was more difficult before a new machine arrived on site in June.

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Image Source : www.dispatch.com

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