Heather Morris, T. Cameron Wild, Hauwa Bwala, Jakob Koziel, Petra Schulz, Diane Kunyk, Tania Bubela, Elaine Hyshka
{"title":"加拿大丧失亲人母亲的媒体报道和公众对减少伤害的支持","authors":"Heather Morris, T. Cameron Wild, Hauwa Bwala, Jakob Koziel, Petra Schulz, Diane Kunyk, Tania Bubela, Elaine Hyshka","doi":"10.1080/09687637.2023.2261615","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"AbstractBackground Mothers whose child’s death is related to substance use have emerged as prominent and outspoken critics of Canadian drug policy in the news media. We examined the extent to which, and who among, the general public has seen or heard mothers bereaved by substance use in the media; predicted factors associated with exposure to such media; and explored associations with public acceptance of harm reduction.Methods We analyzed data from a 2018 online panel survey assessing Canadian views on harm reduction, using randomly-drawn provincially representative (N = 4645) and nationally representative (n = 2002) samples of adults.Results A majority (58.3%) of Canadians had seen or heard media featuring a mother whose child had died from an overdose. Respondents who had an increased level of familiarity with people who use drugs as well as older respondents were significantly more likely to have reported exposure to bereaved mothers’ media. Respondents who had been exposed to bereaved mothers’ media coverage were less likely to respond ‘don’t know/no opinion’ of harm reduction vs. opposing harm reduction.Conclusion Additional studies using a variety of methods are required to further evaluate the advocacy work being undertaken by mothers bereaved by substance use.Keywords: Harm reductionpublic opinionbereavementmedia advocacy Authors’ contributionsConceptualization: Heather Morris, T. Cameron Wild, Elaine Hyshka, Diane Kunyk, Tania Bubela, Petra SchulzData Curation: Heather Morris, T. Cameron Wild, Jakob KozielFormal Analysis: Heather Morris, T. Camerion Wild, Elaine Hyshka, Hauwa Bwala, Jakob KozielFunding Acquisition: T. Cameron Wild, Elaine HyshkaInvestigation: Heather Morris, T. Cameron Wild, Elaine HyshkaMethodology: Heather Morris, T. Cameron Wild, Elaine Hyshka, Diane Kunyk, Tania BubelaProject Administration: Heather Morris, T. Cameron Wild, Elaine HyshkaResources: Heather Morris, T. Cameron Wild, Elaine Hyshka,Software: Heather Morris, T. Cameron Wild, Elaine Hyshka, Jakob Koziel, Hauwa BwalaSupervision: T. Cameron Wild & Elaine HyshkaValidation: T. Cameron Wild & Elaine HyshkaVisualization: Heather Morris, T. Cameron Wild, Elaine HyshkaWriting Original Draft: Heather Morris, Cam Wild, Elaine HyshkaWriting Reviewing & Editing: Heather Morris, Cam Wild, Elaine Hyshka, Diane Kunyk, Tania Bubela, Jakob Koziel, Hauwa Bwala, Petra SchulzDisclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Data availability statementData are available from https://borealisdata.ca/dataverse/ualbertaAdditional informationFundingThis work was supported by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research under grant CIHR; MOP 137073; https://cihr-irsc.gc.ca/e/193.html) to TCW and EH; an infrastructure grant from CIHR to the Canadian Research Initiative in Substance Misuse (CRISM), Prairie Node under grant # CRISMN139151; Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) Doctoral Award under grant # 752-2019-2510 to HM; Izaak Walton Killam Memorial Scholarship to HM; the Stollery Children’s Hospital Foundation and the Alberta Women’s Health Foundation under grant #2221 to HM; the Canada Research Chairs program through a Tier 2 Canada Research Chair in Health Systems Innovation under grant # CRC TIER2 233345 which supports Elaine Hyshka. The funders did not play any role in the manuscript. Notes on contributorsHeather MorrisHeather Morris is a registered nurse and postdoctoral fellow in the Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, University of Alberta.T. Cameron WildCam Wild is a Professor, School of Public Health.Hauwa BwalaHauwa Bwala was a research coordinator with the School of Public Health at the time this study was conducted.Jakob KozielJakob Koziel works as a senior research analyst at Bissell Centre, transforming data into insight and analyzing internal and external data to strategically link information to the agency’s mission, vision, and long-term outcomes.Petra SchulzPetra Schulz is a founding member of Moms Stop the Harm. Through the lessons learned after losing her youngest son Danny to drug poisoning, Petra has become an advocate for drug policy reform aimed at reducing the harm associated with the criminalization of substance use.Diane KunykDiane Kunyk is Vice Dean and Professor, Faculty of Nursing, University of Alberta.Tania BubelaTania Bubela is Professor and Dean, Health Sciences, Simon Fraser University.Elaine HyshkaElaine Hyshka is an Associate Professor, Canada Research Chair in Health Systems Innovation and Associate Professor, School of Public Health, College of Health Sciences, University of Alberta and Scientific Director, Inner City Health and Wellness Program, Royal Alexandra Hospital.","PeriodicalId":11367,"journal":{"name":"Drugs: Education, Prevention and Policy","volume":"2 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":1.5000,"publicationDate":"2023-10-20","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Bereaved mothers’ media coverage and public support for harm reduction in Canada\",\"authors\":\"Heather Morris, T. Cameron Wild, Hauwa Bwala, Jakob Koziel, Petra Schulz, Diane Kunyk, Tania Bubela, Elaine Hyshka\",\"doi\":\"10.1080/09687637.2023.2261615\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"AbstractBackground Mothers whose child’s death is related to substance use have emerged as prominent and outspoken critics of Canadian drug policy in the news media. We examined the extent to which, and who among, the general public has seen or heard mothers bereaved by substance use in the media; predicted factors associated with exposure to such media; and explored associations with public acceptance of harm reduction.Methods We analyzed data from a 2018 online panel survey assessing Canadian views on harm reduction, using randomly-drawn provincially representative (N = 4645) and nationally representative (n = 2002) samples of adults.Results A majority (58.3%) of Canadians had seen or heard media featuring a mother whose child had died from an overdose. Respondents who had an increased level of familiarity with people who use drugs as well as older respondents were significantly more likely to have reported exposure to bereaved mothers’ media. Respondents who had been exposed to bereaved mothers’ media coverage were less likely to respond ‘don’t know/no opinion’ of harm reduction vs. opposing harm reduction.Conclusion Additional studies using a variety of methods are required to further evaluate the advocacy work being undertaken by mothers bereaved by substance use.Keywords: Harm reductionpublic opinionbereavementmedia advocacy Authors’ contributionsConceptualization: Heather Morris, T. Cameron Wild, Elaine Hyshka, Diane Kunyk, Tania Bubela, Petra SchulzData Curation: Heather Morris, T. Cameron Wild, Jakob KozielFormal Analysis: Heather Morris, T. Camerion Wild, Elaine Hyshka, Hauwa Bwala, Jakob KozielFunding Acquisition: T. Cameron Wild, Elaine HyshkaInvestigation: Heather Morris, T. Cameron Wild, Elaine HyshkaMethodology: Heather Morris, T. Cameron Wild, Elaine Hyshka, Diane Kunyk, Tania BubelaProject Administration: Heather Morris, T. Cameron Wild, Elaine HyshkaResources: Heather Morris, T. Cameron Wild, Elaine Hyshka,Software: Heather Morris, T. Cameron Wild, Elaine Hyshka, Jakob Koziel, Hauwa BwalaSupervision: T. Cameron Wild & Elaine HyshkaValidation: T. Cameron Wild & Elaine HyshkaVisualization: Heather Morris, T. Cameron Wild, Elaine HyshkaWriting Original Draft: Heather Morris, Cam Wild, Elaine HyshkaWriting Reviewing & Editing: Heather Morris, Cam Wild, Elaine Hyshka, Diane Kunyk, Tania Bubela, Jakob Koziel, Hauwa Bwala, Petra SchulzDisclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Data availability statementData are available from https://borealisdata.ca/dataverse/ualbertaAdditional informationFundingThis work was supported by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research under grant CIHR; MOP 137073; https://cihr-irsc.gc.ca/e/193.html) to TCW and EH; an infrastructure grant from CIHR to the Canadian Research Initiative in Substance Misuse (CRISM), Prairie Node under grant # CRISMN139151; Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) Doctoral Award under grant # 752-2019-2510 to HM; Izaak Walton Killam Memorial Scholarship to HM; the Stollery Children’s Hospital Foundation and the Alberta Women’s Health Foundation under grant #2221 to HM; the Canada Research Chairs program through a Tier 2 Canada Research Chair in Health Systems Innovation under grant # CRC TIER2 233345 which supports Elaine Hyshka. The funders did not play any role in the manuscript. Notes on contributorsHeather MorrisHeather Morris is a registered nurse and postdoctoral fellow in the Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, University of Alberta.T. Cameron WildCam Wild is a Professor, School of Public Health.Hauwa BwalaHauwa Bwala was a research coordinator with the School of Public Health at the time this study was conducted.Jakob KozielJakob Koziel works as a senior research analyst at Bissell Centre, transforming data into insight and analyzing internal and external data to strategically link information to the agency’s mission, vision, and long-term outcomes.Petra SchulzPetra Schulz is a founding member of Moms Stop the Harm. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
【摘要】背景:在新闻媒体上,孩子的死亡与药物使用有关的母亲已经成为加拿大毒品政策的突出和直言不讳的批评者。我们调查了公众在媒体上看到或听到母亲因药物使用而失去亲人的情况的程度,以及其中有哪些人;与接触这类媒介有关的预测因素;并探讨了公众对减少危害的接受程度。方法:采用随机抽取的省级代表性(N = 4645)和全国代表性(N = 2002)成年人样本,分析了2018年在线小组调查的数据,该调查评估了加拿大人对减少危害的看法。结果大多数(58.3%)的加拿大人曾看到或听到媒体报道有母亲的孩子死于药物过量。与吸毒者熟悉程度增加的受访者以及年龄较大的受访者更有可能报告接触过丧亲母亲的媒体。接触过丧亲母亲媒体报道的受访者对减少伤害“不知道/没有意见”与反对减少伤害的可能性较小。结论需要使用各种方法进行更多的研究,以进一步评估因药物使用而失去亲人的母亲正在开展的宣传工作。关键词:减少伤害公众舆论痛失亲人媒体倡导作者贡献概念化:希瑟·莫里斯、t·卡梅伦·怀尔德、伊莱恩·希什卡、黛安·昆伊克、塔尼亚·布贝拉、佩特拉·舒尔茨数据策展:希瑟·莫里斯、t·卡梅伦·怀尔德、雅各布·科齐尔形式分析:希瑟·莫里斯、t·卡梅伦·怀尔德、伊莱恩·希什卡、豪瓦·布瓦拉、雅各布·科齐尔资金获取:t·卡梅伦·怀尔德、伊莱恩·希什卡调查:希瑟·莫里斯、t·卡梅伦·怀尔德、伊莱恩·希什卡研究方法:Heather Morris, T. Cameron Wild, Elaine Hyshka, Diane Kunyk, Tania bubela项目管理:Heather Morris, T. Cameron Wild, Elaine Hyshka资源来源:Heather Morris, T. Cameron Wild, Elaine Hyshka,软件:Heather Morris, T. Cameron Wild, Elaine Hyshka, Jakob Koziel, Hauwa bwal监督:T. Cameron Wild和Elaine Hyshka验证:T. Cameron Wild和Elaine Hyshka可视化:Heather Morris, T. Cameron Wild, Elaine Hyshka写作原图:Heather Morris, Cam Wild, Elaine Hyshka, Diane Kunyk, Tania Bubela, Jakob Koziel, Hauwa Bwala, Petra schulz披露声明作者未报告潜在的利益冲突。数据可用性声明数据可从https://borealisdata.ca/dataverse/ualbertaAdditional信息获得资金本工作由加拿大卫生研究院在CIHR资助下支持;拖把137073;https://cihr-irsc.gc.ca/e/193.html)到TCW和EH;CIHR向加拿大物质滥用研究倡议(CRISM)提供的基础设施赠款,草原节点,赠款# CRISMN139151;社会科学与人文科学研究理事会(SSHRC)博士资助项目# 752-2019-2510授予HM;伊扎克·沃尔顿·基拉姆纪念奖学金;斯托勒里儿童医院基金会和艾伯塔省妇女健康基金会向卫生部提供的第2221号赠款;通过资助# CRC TIER2 233345的加拿大二级卫生系统创新研究主席计划,支持伊莱恩·希什卡。资助者在手稿中没有扮演任何角色。作者简介希瑟·莫里斯希瑟·莫里斯是加拿大阿尔伯塔大学医学和牙科学院的注册护士和博士后。卡梅隆·怀尔德是公共卫生学院的教授。在进行这项研究时,Hauwa Bwala是公共卫生学院的研究协调员。Jakob Koziel是比塞尔中心的高级研究分析师,将数据转化为洞察力,分析内部和外部数据,将信息与该机构的使命、愿景和长期成果战略性地联系起来。佩特拉·舒尔茨是“妈妈停止伤害”组织的创始成员之一。佩特拉的小儿子丹尼死于毒品中毒,吸取了这一教训,佩特拉已成为毒品政策改革的倡导者,旨在减少与药物使用定罪相关的危害。Diane Kunyk,加拿大阿尔伯塔大学护理学院副院长兼教授。Tania Bubela是西蒙弗雷泽大学健康科学系的教授和院长。Elaine Hyshka是加拿大卫生系统创新研究主席、阿尔伯塔大学卫生科学学院公共卫生学院副教授、皇家亚历山德拉医院内城卫生与健康项目科学主任。
Bereaved mothers’ media coverage and public support for harm reduction in Canada
AbstractBackground Mothers whose child’s death is related to substance use have emerged as prominent and outspoken critics of Canadian drug policy in the news media. We examined the extent to which, and who among, the general public has seen or heard mothers bereaved by substance use in the media; predicted factors associated with exposure to such media; and explored associations with public acceptance of harm reduction.Methods We analyzed data from a 2018 online panel survey assessing Canadian views on harm reduction, using randomly-drawn provincially representative (N = 4645) and nationally representative (n = 2002) samples of adults.Results A majority (58.3%) of Canadians had seen or heard media featuring a mother whose child had died from an overdose. Respondents who had an increased level of familiarity with people who use drugs as well as older respondents were significantly more likely to have reported exposure to bereaved mothers’ media. Respondents who had been exposed to bereaved mothers’ media coverage were less likely to respond ‘don’t know/no opinion’ of harm reduction vs. opposing harm reduction.Conclusion Additional studies using a variety of methods are required to further evaluate the advocacy work being undertaken by mothers bereaved by substance use.Keywords: Harm reductionpublic opinionbereavementmedia advocacy Authors’ contributionsConceptualization: Heather Morris, T. Cameron Wild, Elaine Hyshka, Diane Kunyk, Tania Bubela, Petra SchulzData Curation: Heather Morris, T. Cameron Wild, Jakob KozielFormal Analysis: Heather Morris, T. Camerion Wild, Elaine Hyshka, Hauwa Bwala, Jakob KozielFunding Acquisition: T. Cameron Wild, Elaine HyshkaInvestigation: Heather Morris, T. Cameron Wild, Elaine HyshkaMethodology: Heather Morris, T. Cameron Wild, Elaine Hyshka, Diane Kunyk, Tania BubelaProject Administration: Heather Morris, T. Cameron Wild, Elaine HyshkaResources: Heather Morris, T. Cameron Wild, Elaine Hyshka,Software: Heather Morris, T. Cameron Wild, Elaine Hyshka, Jakob Koziel, Hauwa BwalaSupervision: T. Cameron Wild & Elaine HyshkaValidation: T. Cameron Wild & Elaine HyshkaVisualization: Heather Morris, T. Cameron Wild, Elaine HyshkaWriting Original Draft: Heather Morris, Cam Wild, Elaine HyshkaWriting Reviewing & Editing: Heather Morris, Cam Wild, Elaine Hyshka, Diane Kunyk, Tania Bubela, Jakob Koziel, Hauwa Bwala, Petra SchulzDisclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Data availability statementData are available from https://borealisdata.ca/dataverse/ualbertaAdditional informationFundingThis work was supported by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research under grant CIHR; MOP 137073; https://cihr-irsc.gc.ca/e/193.html) to TCW and EH; an infrastructure grant from CIHR to the Canadian Research Initiative in Substance Misuse (CRISM), Prairie Node under grant # CRISMN139151; Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) Doctoral Award under grant # 752-2019-2510 to HM; Izaak Walton Killam Memorial Scholarship to HM; the Stollery Children’s Hospital Foundation and the Alberta Women’s Health Foundation under grant #2221 to HM; the Canada Research Chairs program through a Tier 2 Canada Research Chair in Health Systems Innovation under grant # CRC TIER2 233345 which supports Elaine Hyshka. The funders did not play any role in the manuscript. Notes on contributorsHeather MorrisHeather Morris is a registered nurse and postdoctoral fellow in the Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, University of Alberta.T. Cameron WildCam Wild is a Professor, School of Public Health.Hauwa BwalaHauwa Bwala was a research coordinator with the School of Public Health at the time this study was conducted.Jakob KozielJakob Koziel works as a senior research analyst at Bissell Centre, transforming data into insight and analyzing internal and external data to strategically link information to the agency’s mission, vision, and long-term outcomes.Petra SchulzPetra Schulz is a founding member of Moms Stop the Harm. Through the lessons learned after losing her youngest son Danny to drug poisoning, Petra has become an advocate for drug policy reform aimed at reducing the harm associated with the criminalization of substance use.Diane KunykDiane Kunyk is Vice Dean and Professor, Faculty of Nursing, University of Alberta.Tania BubelaTania Bubela is Professor and Dean, Health Sciences, Simon Fraser University.Elaine HyshkaElaine Hyshka is an Associate Professor, Canada Research Chair in Health Systems Innovation and Associate Professor, School of Public Health, College of Health Sciences, University of Alberta and Scientific Director, Inner City Health and Wellness Program, Royal Alexandra Hospital.
期刊介绍:
Drugs: education, prevention & policy is a refereed journal which aims to provide a forum for communication and debate between policy makers, practitioners and researchers concerned with social and health policy responses to legal and illicit drug use and drug-related harm. The journal publishes multi-disciplinary research papers, commentaries and reviews on policy, prevention and harm reduction issues regarding the use and misuse of alcohol, tobacco and other drugs. It is journal policy to encourage submissions which reflect different cultural, historical and theoretical approaches to the development of policy and practice.