The Internalization of Stigma and the Shaping of the Grief Experience for Peers Bereaved by a Drug-Related Death.

Omega Pub Date : 2024-08-19 DOI:10.1177/00302228241275728
Daniel O'Callaghan, Sharon Lambert
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Abstract

People who use drugs form a significant part of the community who are impacted by drug-related deaths, but their stigmatized positioning in society yields implications for their access to support and the social recognition of their grief. This project explores how the internalization of drug-related stigmas shapes the grief experience for peers bereaved by a DRD. Six individuals who experienced the drug death of a peer during their own time in active addiction participated in semi-structured interviews, analyzed by interpretative phenomenological analysis. Three superordinate themes are reported in this paper: (i) Forged Connections; (ii) The Condemnation Script; and (iii) Nowhere Left to Turn. Participants reported grief responses such as survivor's guilt, shame, and increased drug use against the wider social invalidation of their close peer bonds. This paper appeals for a more health-based approach to supporting people in active addiction that recognizes and validates their grief experiences.

因毒品导致的死亡而失去亲人的同龄人对耻辱的内化和悲伤体验的塑造》(The Internalization of Stigma and the Shaping of the Grief Experience for Peers Bereaved by a Drug-Related Death)。
吸毒者是受毒品相关死亡事件影响的群体中的重要组成部分,但他们在社会中被污名化的定位影响了他们获得支持和社会对其悲伤的认可。本项目探讨了与毒品有关的污名内化如何影响因 DRD 而丧生的同龄人的悲伤体验。六名在自己吸毒成瘾期间经历过同伴吸毒死亡的人参与了半结构式访谈,并通过解释性现象分析法进行了分析。本文报告了三个首要主题:(i) 建立联系;(ii) 谴责脚本;以及 (iii) 无处可去。参与者报告了悲伤反应,如幸存者的内疚感、羞耻感和吸毒的增加,与此同时,他们亲密的同伴关系在更广泛的社会范围内变得无效。本文呼吁采用一种更加基于健康的方法来支持积极戒毒者,承认并确认他们的悲伤经历。
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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