Latine perspectives on the impact of family, perceptions of medication, health systems, incarceration, and housing on accessing opioid agonist therapy: A thematic analysis

0 PSYCHOLOGY, CLINICAL
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Abstract

Introduction

Opioid-related overdose deaths rates among Latine individuals are increasing rapidly and, in Massachusetts, have exceeded rates among non-Hispanic White individuals. Yet Latine individuals are less likely to receive opioid agonist therapies (OAT) methadone and buprenorphine, which have been demonstrated to prevent opioid deaths. Amid climbing Latine overdose rates, we lack qualitative data from Spanish-speaking people who use opioids about their views on and access to OAT. In this paper, we sought to assess variables affecting Latine individuals' initiation of OAT.

Methods

We conducted 21 semi-structured interviews – half in Spanish – with Latine-identifying individuals recruited from four locations–three residential treatment sites and one city shelter–in Boston offering services to people who use drugs. We utilized thematic analysis to identify barriers and facilitators to starting and continuing OAT.

Results

The following themes – which cut across individual-, interpersonal-, and systems-level variables – emerged as core considerations shaping Latine participants' OAT engagement: (1) family, (2) medication desirability and accessibility, (3) health care resources, (4) housing stability, and (5) incarceration. First, family members were prominent interpersonal influences on participants' treatment decisions. For some participants, family introduced participants to opioids at young ages and later supported them in recovery. Second, engagement with OAT was shaped by individual-level opinions on the medications as well as by systems-level experiences with trying to access the medications. Participants identified benefits and drawbacks of methadone versus buprenorphine, with greater access difficulties for methadone. Third, the health care setting in Boston provided notable systems-level facilitators to OAT access, including outreach workers, Medicaid, and Spanish-speaking providers. Fourth, housing instability impeded some from accessing OAT while motivating others to initiate the medications. Finally, incarceration created systems-level barriers to OAT engagement. Most participants had been incarcerated in jail or prison but did not have access to OAT during incarceration or during their transition back to the community.

Conclusions

Approaches to increase OAT engagement among Latine individuals should consider integrating family into recovery pathways, tailoring information in Spanish, developing bilingual/bicultural staffing, ensuring supportive insurance coverage systems, addressing housing needs, and making OAT available for individuals involved in the legal system.

拉美人关于家庭、对药物的看法、医疗系统、监禁和住房对获得阿片类激动剂治疗的影响的观点:专题分析。
导言:拉丁裔人群中与阿片类药物过量相关的死亡率正在迅速上升,在马萨诸塞州,这一比率已经超过了非西班牙裔白人。然而,拉丁裔患者接受阿片类激动剂疗法(OAT)美沙酮和丁丙诺啡的可能性较低,而这两种疗法已被证明可预防阿片类药物致死。在拉美裔阿片类药物过量率不断攀升的情况下,我们缺乏来自西班牙语阿片类药物使用者的定性数据,无法了解他们对 OAT 的看法和使用情况。在本文中,我们试图评估影响拉美人开始使用 OAT 的变量:我们对波士顿四个为吸毒者提供服务的地点--三个住院治疗点和一个城市庇护所--招募的拉丁裔人士进行了 21 次半结构式访谈,其中一半用西班牙语进行。我们利用主题分析来确定开始和继续接受 OAT 的障碍和促进因素:以下主题跨越了个人、人际和系统层面的变量,是影响 Latine 参与者参与 OAT 的核心因素:(1)家庭;(2)药物的可取性和可及性;(3)医疗保健资源;(4)住房稳定性;以及(5)监禁。首先,家庭成员对参与者的治疗决定具有显著的人际影响。对于一些参与者来说,家人在他们年幼时就向他们介绍了阿片类药物,后来又支持他们进行康复。其次,个人层面对药物的看法以及系统层面试图获得药物的经历影响了他们对 OAT 的参与。参与者们指出了美沙酮与丁丙诺啡的利弊,其中美沙酮的获取难度更大。第三,波士顿的医疗环境为获取 OAT 提供了显著的系统层面的便利,包括外展工作者、医疗补助(Medicaid)和讲西班牙语的医疗服务提供者。第四,住房的不稳定性阻碍了一些人获得 OAT,同时也促使另一些人开始服药。最后,监禁对参与 OAT 造成了系统层面的障碍。大多数参与者都曾被监禁在监狱或牢房中,但在监禁期间或重返社区的过渡时期却无法获得 OAT:增加拉丁裔患者参与 OAT 的方法应考虑将家庭纳入康复途径、定制西班牙语信息、发展双语/文化工作人员队伍、确保支持性保险覆盖系统、解决住房需求以及为涉及法律系统的患者提供 OAT。
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来源期刊
Journal of substance use and addiction treatment
Journal of substance use and addiction treatment Biological Psychiatry, Neuroscience (General), Psychiatry and Mental Health, Psychology (General)
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