病人、同事、系统和自我:探索医生在照顾使用药物的孕妇及其新生儿时的情感层次。

0 PSYCHOLOGY, CLINICAL
Noelle G. Martinez , Dominika L. Seidman , Heather Briscoe , Crystal M. Hayes , Ekene I. Ojukwu , Dafna Paltin , Sarah C.M. Roberts
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引用次数: 0

摘要

导言:使用药物的孕妇会遭受严重的污名化,包括在医疗机构中,医生会就治疗计划、资源分配,甚至一个人是否有能力为人父母等问题做出重大决定。以往的心理学研究已经证明了情绪对决策的影响,以及对成见的发展和表达的影响。然而,对医生情绪的具体内容以及处理这些情绪的方法的研究相对较少。我们试图更好地了解在安全网生产和分娩/住院环境中执业的医生的情绪体验,从而为促进更人性化、更公平的护理的策略提供参考:从 2021 年 3 月到 2022 年 6 月,本研究对旧金山湾区 24 名为吸毒孕妇和/或新生儿提供护理的医生(妇产科、儿科、家庭医学科)进行了半结构化访谈。我们采用演绎法和归纳法进行编码,并确定了有关医生情绪的性质、病因和处理的主题:医生描述了一系列与人际关系(患者、同事)、系统层面和内部动态有关的情绪。愤怒、悲伤、沮丧和无助等情绪源于他们对患者的深切关怀和同情、目睹同事的污名化行为、不认同惩罚性制度以及认识到自身在影响变革方面的局限性。很少有参与者能找到处理这些情绪的策略,有几位参与者描述了他们为了保持幸福感和专业性而努力摆脱情绪体验的过程:为使用药物的孕妇及其新生儿提供护理的医生经历了强烈的多层次情绪。本研究认为,进一步努力支持医生的情绪处理和结构能力,可以改善使用药物的孕妇的医疗保健体验和结果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Patients, colleagues, systems, and self: Exploring layers of physician emotions in caring for pregnant people who use substances and their newborns

Introduction

Pregnant people who use substances experience significant stigma, including in healthcare settings, where physicians make high-stakes decisions about treatment plans, resource allocation, and even a person's ability to parent. Previous psychology research has demonstrated the influence of emotions on decision-making, as well as on the development and expression of stigma. Yet the specific content of physician emotions, as well as approaches to processing these emotions, has been relatively under-examined. We sought to better understand the emotional experiences of physicians who practice in safety-net labor and delivery/inpatient settings to inform strategies to facilitate more humanizing, equitable care.

Methods

From March 2021 to June 2022, the study team conducted semi-structured interviews with 24 San Francisco Bay Area-based physicians (obstetrics-gynecology, pediatrics, family medicine) caring for pregnant people who use substances and/or their newborns. We used deductive and inductive coding and identified themes regarding the nature, etiology, and processing of physician emotions.

Results

Physicians described experiencing a range of emotions related to interpersonal (patients, colleagues), systems-level, and internal dynamics. Emotions such as anger, sadness, frustration, and helplessness resulted from their deep care and empathy for patients, witnessing stigmatizing colleague behaviors, disagreement with punitive systems, and recognition of their own limitations in effecting change. Few participants identified strategies for processing these emotions, and several described efforts to disengage from their emotional experience to preserve their sense of well-being and professionalism.

Conclusions

Physicians caring for pregnant people who use substances and their newborns experienced intense, multi-layered emotions. This study posits that additional efforts to support physician emotional processing and structural competency could improve healthcare experiences and outcomes for pregnant people who use substances.

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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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