Understanding healthcare engagement for people who inject drugs.

IF 2.1 4区 医学 Q2 NURSING
Research in Nursing & Health Pub Date : 2024-04-01 Epub Date: 2023-11-19 DOI:10.1002/nur.22355
Omeid Heidari, Abigail Winiker, Derek T Dangerfield, Jennifer Wenzel, Tamar Rodney, Shruti Mehta, Becky Genberg
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

People who inject drugs (PWID) are at an increased risk of multimorbid mental health and chronic diseases, which are frequently underdiagnosed and under-treated due to systemic barriers and ongoing substance use. Healthcare engagement is essential to address these conditions and prevent excess morbidity and mortality. The goal of this study was to understand how PWID engage in care for their chronic health conditions and substance use treatment given the known historic and pervasive barriers. We conducted 24 semistructured qualitative interviews informed by the Behavioral Model for Vulnerable Populations between July-September 2019. Participants were sampled across a range of comorbidities, including co-occurring mental health disorders. Thematic analysis was conducted to explore experiences of healthcare engagement for multimorbid chronic diseases, mental health, and treatment for substance use disorder. Mean age for participants was 58 years; 63% reported male sex and 83% reported Black race. Interviews yielded themes regarding healthcare access and wraparound services, positive patient-provider relationships, service integration for substance use treatment and mental health, healthcare needs alignment, medication of opioid use disorder stigma, and acceptance of healthcare. Taken together, participants described how these themes enabled healthcare engagement. Engagement in care is crucial to support health and recovery. Clinical implications include the importance of strengthening patient-provider relationships, encouraging integration of medical and mental health services, and counseling on substance use treatment options in a non- stigmatizing manner. Additionally, policy to reimburse wrap-around support for substance use recovery can improve care engagement and outcomes related to chronic diseases, mental health, and substance use among PWID. No Patient or Public Contribution: While we acknowledge and thank ALIVE participants for their time for data collection and sharing their perspectives, no ALIVE participants, other people who use drugs, and service users were involved in data collection, analysis or interpretation of data, or in preparation of the manuscript.

了解注射吸毒者的医疗保健参与情况。
注射吸毒者罹患多病精神卫生和慢性疾病的风险增加,由于系统性障碍和持续使用药物,这些疾病往往得不到充分诊断和治疗。医疗保健参与对于解决这些问题和防止过度发病率和死亡率至关重要。本研究的目的是了解在已知的历史和普遍障碍的情况下,PWID如何参与慢性健康状况和药物使用治疗的护理。2019年7月至9月期间,我们通过弱势群体行为模型进行了24次半结构化定性访谈。参与者在一系列合并症中取样,包括同时发生的精神健康障碍。进行主题分析,以探讨医疗保健参与的经验,多病慢性疾病,心理健康和治疗的物质使用障碍。参与者的平均年龄为58岁;63%的人说是男性,83%的人说是黑人。访谈的主题涉及医疗保健获取和综合服务、积极的患者-提供者关系、药物使用治疗和心理健康的服务整合、医疗保健需求调整、阿片类药物使用障碍的药物治疗以及对医疗保健的接受。总的来说,与会者描述了这些主题如何促进医疗保健参与。参与护理对支持健康和康复至关重要。临床意义包括加强患者-提供者关系的重要性,鼓励医疗和心理健康服务的整合,以及以非污名化的方式就药物使用治疗方案进行咨询。此外,为药物使用康复提供全面支持的报销政策可以改善PWID患者的慢性疾病、心理健康和药物使用相关的护理参与和结果。无患者或公众贡献:虽然我们感谢ALIVE参与者花时间收集数据并分享他们的观点,但ALIVE参与者、其他药物使用者和服务使用者没有参与数据收集、数据分析或解释,也没有参与手稿的准备。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
73
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Research in Nursing & Health ( RINAH ) is a peer-reviewed general research journal devoted to publication of a wide range of research that will inform the practice of nursing and other health disciplines. The editors invite reports of research describing problems and testing interventions related to health phenomena, health care and self-care, clinical organization and administration; and the testing of research findings in practice. Research protocols are considered if funded in a peer-reviewed process by an agency external to the authors’ home institution and if the work is in progress. Papers on research methods and techniques are appropriate if they go beyond what is already generally available in the literature and include description of successful use of the method. Theory papers are accepted if each proposition is supported by research evidence. Systematic reviews of the literature are reviewed if PRISMA guidelines are followed. Letters to the editor commenting on published articles are welcome.
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