农村吸毒者对吸毒过量的反应:多地区定性研究。

IF 4 2区 社会学 Q1 SUBSTANCE ABUSE
Robin Baker, Rob J Fredericksen, Abby E Rudolph, Thomas J Stopka, Suzan M Walters, Monica Fadanelli, Rebecca S Bolinski, Adams L Sibley, Erin Stack, Heidi M Crane, P Todd Korthuis, David W Seal
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:分发纳洛酮的努力使更多人具备了逆转阿片类药物过量的能力,但由于担心法律后果,吸毒者往往不愿拨打 911。与城市社区相比,农村社区在减少用药过量死亡方面面临着独特的挑战,包括获得减低伤害服务的途径有限,以及对污名化和隐私的更多关注:农村阿片类药物倡议于 2017 年获得资助,旨在更好地了解与美国农村社区阿片类药物危机相关的健康危害,该倡议由横跨 10 个州和 65 个县的 8 项研究组成。每项研究都对吸毒者进行了半结构化定性访谈,以了解影响吸毒和健康行为的背景因素。我们分析了七项研究的定性数据,以了解同伴对用药过量的反应:在受访的 304 名参与者中,55% 为男性,70% 为白人,80% 表示目前使用注射毒品,60% 表示使用甲基苯丙胺。与针对城市环境的研究发现的情况类似,农村社区的吸毒者使用一系列策略来扭转用药过量的情况,包括非基于证据的方法。一些人报告说,需要使用多剂量的纳洛酮才能逆转用药过量。围绕是否愿意拨打 911,出现了三个主题,包括(1)因害怕法律后果而犹豫是否拨打 911,(2)对执法人员的负面看法或经历,以及(3)努力获得医疗干预,同时避免身份验证/执法介入:结论:吸毒者采用多种策略试图逆转用药过量,包括非基于证据的方法。需要加强有关最有效、危害最小的策略的教育。不愿意拨打 911 是因为担心潜在的法律后果以及对执法人员的看法,而在农村社区,执法人员更容易识别吸毒者,因此这种担心可能会更加强烈。吸毒者会不遗余力地为同伴联系所需的医疗服务,这表明采取综合干预措施以减少与执法人员的互动并消除因报告吸毒过量而产生的法律后果至关重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Overdose responses among rural people who use drugs: A multi-regional qualitative study.

Background: Efforts to distribute naloxone have equipped more people with the ability to reverse opioid overdoses but people who use drugs are often reluctant to call 911 due to concerns for legal repercussions. Rural communities face unique challenges in reducing overdose deaths compared to urban communities, including limited access to harm reduction services as well as greater concerns about stigma and privacy.

Methods: The Rural Opioid Initiative was funded in 2017 to better understand the health-related harms associated with the opioid crisis in rural US communities and consists of eight studies spanning ten states and 65 counties. Each study conducted semi-structured qualitative interviews with people who use drugs to understand contextual factors influencing drug use and health behaviors. We analyzed qualitative data from seven studies with data available at the time of analysis to understand peer response to overdose.

Results: Of the 304 participants interviewed, 55% were men, 70% were white, 80% reported current injection drug use, and 60% reported methamphetamine use. Similar to what has been found in studies focused on urban settings, people who use drugs in rural communities use a range of strategies to reverse overdoses, including non-evidence-based approaches. Several reported that multiple doses of naloxone are needed to reverse overdose. Three themes emerged around the willingness to call 911, including (1) hesitancy to call 911 for fear of legal consequences, (2) negative perceptions or experiences with law enforcement officers, and (3) efforts to obtain medical intervention while avoiding identification/law enforcement involvement.

Conclusion: People who use drugs employ multiple strategies to attempt overdose reversal, including non-evidence-based approaches. Greater education about the most effective and least harmful strategies is needed. Reluctance to call 911 is rooted in concerns about potential legal consequences as well as perceptions about law enforcement officers, which may be heightened in rural communities where people who use drugs are more easily identified by law enforcement. People who use drugs will go to great strides to connect their peers to needed medical services, suggesting that comprehensive interventions to reduce interactions with law enforcement officers and eliminate legal consequences for reporting overdoses are critical.

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来源期刊
Harm Reduction Journal
Harm Reduction Journal Medicine-Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
CiteScore
5.90
自引率
9.10%
发文量
126
审稿时长
26 weeks
期刊介绍: Harm Reduction Journal is an Open Access, peer-reviewed, online journal whose focus is on the prevalent patterns of psychoactive drug use, the public policies meant to control them, and the search for effective methods of reducing the adverse medical, public health, and social consequences associated with both drugs and drug policies. We define "harm reduction" as "policies and programs which aim to reduce the health, social, and economic costs of legal and illegal psychoactive drug use without necessarily reducing drug consumption". We are especially interested in studies of the evolving patterns of drug use around the world, their implications for the spread of HIV/AIDS and other blood-borne pathogens.
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