初级保健专业人员对基于结构和提供者的药物使用污名化干预措施的看法

Erin Fanning Madden , Felicia Frabis , Jonathan Cohn , Fares Qeadan , Christopher RC Mann , Mark K. Greenwald
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景在初级医疗机构中产生的成见仍然是吸毒者(PWUD)接受治疗的障碍。对于针对影响组织或提供者层面的成见结构性驱动因素的潜在成见干预措施的可接受性知之甚少。参与者包括临床(如医生、护士)和非临床(如行政人员、接待员)工作人员。访谈探究了对 PWUD 的成见的看法,以及为减轻这种成见而采取的干预措施的可接受性。结果参与者大多认为药物滥用成见是个人态度或知识局限造成的,并认为这种成见很少发生在人际交往中。参与者仍然敏锐地意识到,上游社会和组织因素对残疾人的护理造成了结构性障碍和/或恶化了结果,但他们很少将这些因素称为成见。一些提供者和结构性减少污名化干预措施得到了热烈支持,因为这些干预措施解决了参与者对药物滥用污名化驱动因素的看法(如缺乏知识),或提供了可以提高护理质量的资源,或为残疾人提供了资源。相反,参与者反对一些潜在的污名化干预措施,例如减少尿液药物检测频率和增加临床就诊时间,因为保险公司或监管机构等外部力量认为这些措施不可行。结论虽然大多数参与者将药物滥用污名化概念化为一种个人或人际交往过程,最好通过培训来解决,但他们对健康的社会决定因素的认识似乎促使他们对一些结构性干预措施持开放态度,以减少在初级保健环境中组织和提供者对残疾人的污名化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Perceptions of structural and provider-based substance use stigma interventions among primary care professionals

Background

Stigma enacted in primary care settings remains a barrier to care for people who use drugs (PWUD). Little is known about the acceptability of potential stigma interventions to target structural drivers of stigma affecting the organizational- or provider-level.

Methods

In-depth interview data were collected from 21 individuals working in Michigan primary care facilities. Participants included clinical (e.g., physicians, nurses) and non-clinical (e.g., administrators, receptionists) staff. Interviews explored perceptions of stigma toward PWUD and the acceptability of interventions to mitigate such stigma. Thematic analysis was used to identify stigma themes.

Results

Participants largely reported substance-use stigma as a matter of individual attitudes or knowledge limitations and described such stigma as rarely occurring during interpersonal interactions. Participants were still acutely aware of upstream societal and organizational factors creating structural barriers to care and/or worsening outcomes among PWUD, but seldom labeled these as stigma. Some provider and structural stigma reduction interventions were enthusiastically supported because they address participant ideas of substance-use stigma drivers (e.g., lack of knowledge) or provide resources that could improve care quality or provide resources for PWUD. Conversely, participants opposed some potential stigma interventions, e.g., less-frequent urine drug testing and increasing clinical visit time, deemed infeasible because of outside forces like insurers or regulators.

Conclusions

Although most participants conceptualized substance-use stigma as an individual or interpersonal process best addressed with training, their awareness of social determinants of health seemed to fuel an openness to some structural interventions to reduce organizational and provider stigma toward PWUD in primary care settings.

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来源期刊
Drug and alcohol dependence reports
Drug and alcohol dependence reports Psychiatry and Mental Health
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