将芬太尼正常化:解读感知到的惩教人员工作 "风险"。

IF 3.7 2区 医学 Q1 SUBSTANCE ABUSE
Rosemary Ricciardelli, Matthew S Johnston, Gillian Foley
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:在加拿大,关于芬太尼如何影响矫治环境复杂性的研究非常有限,因为学者们主要关注的是监狱中阿片类药物使用和过量的流行情况,以及社区治疗和释放后的使用情况。芬太尼对监狱和社会都构成了持续的挑战:目前这项基于访谈的定性实证研究探讨了加拿大联邦监狱的管教人员(COs,n = 99)对芬太尼的理解,其中一些人曾在芬太尼含量较高的机构工作过,而其他人则较少接触这种药物。我们发现,虽然许多狱警在工作的第一年或第二年都曾应对过吸毒过量的情况,但大多数有过这种经历的狱警都不认为这种情况会造成心理创伤,也不担心工作环境中会出现芬太尼,或者他们对此漠不关心。然而,这一结果与 41.4% 的警官对芬太尼的存在表示担忧的结果形成了竞争--这表明芬太尼作为一种工作场所危害的 "正常化 "以及一种潜在的社会担忧:我们讨论了这些复杂的研究结果对减少工作场所压力和抵制错误信息的影响,除了其他潜在的职业因素外,错误信息也可能是导致 CO 关切芬太尼存在的原因。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Normalizing fentanyl: interpreting the perceived 'risk' of correctional officer work.

Background: Scholarship on how fentanyl affects the complexities of correctional settings is limited in Canada, as scholars have focused on the prevalence of opioid use and overdose in prisons, as well as community treatment and access following release. Fentanyl constitutes a continuing challenge both in prisons and broader society.

Results: The current qualitative, interview-based empirical study examines how fentanyl is interpreted by correctional officers (COs, n = 99) across federal prisons in Canada, some of whom have worked in institutions with a high presence of fentanyl, while others have less exposure to the drug. We found that while many COs had responded to an overdose during their first or second year on the job, most COs who had did not perceive the event to be psychologically traumatic nor were concerned about the presence and availability fentanyl in their work environment, or they were indifferent. Yet this finding competes with the 41.4% of officers who did express concern about the presence of fentanyl - suggesting both a "normalization" of fentanyl as a workplace hazard as well as an underpinning social concern.

Conclusions: We discuss the implications of these complicated findings in relation to reducing workplace stressors and countering misinformation that, in addition to other potential occupational factors, may be responsible for the concerns of COs tied to the presence of fentanyl.

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来源期刊
Addiction Science & Clinical Practice
Addiction Science & Clinical Practice Psychology-Clinical Psychology
CiteScore
3.90
自引率
10.80%
发文量
64
审稿时长
28 weeks
期刊介绍: Addiction Science & Clinical Practice provides a forum for clinically relevant research and perspectives that contribute to improving the quality of care for people with unhealthy alcohol, tobacco, or other drug use and addictive behaviours across a spectrum of clinical settings. Addiction Science & Clinical Practice accepts articles of clinical relevance related to the prevention and treatment of unhealthy alcohol, tobacco, and other drug use across the spectrum of clinical settings. Topics of interest address issues related to the following: the spectrum of unhealthy use of alcohol, tobacco, and other drugs among the range of affected persons (e.g., not limited by age, race/ethnicity, gender, or sexual orientation); the array of clinical prevention and treatment practices (from health messages, to identification and early intervention, to more extensive interventions including counseling and pharmacotherapy and other management strategies); and identification and management of medical, psychiatric, social, and other health consequences of substance use. Addiction Science & Clinical Practice is particularly interested in articles that address how to improve the quality of care for people with unhealthy substance use and related conditions as described in the (US) Institute of Medicine report, Improving the Quality of Healthcare for Mental Health and Substance Use Conditions (Washington, DC: National Academies Press, 2006). Such articles address the quality of care and of health services. Although the journal also welcomes submissions that address these conditions in addiction speciality-treatment settings, the journal is particularly interested in including articles that address unhealthy use outside these settings, including experience with novel models of care and outcomes, and outcomes of research-practice collaborations. Although Addiction Science & Clinical Practice is generally not an outlet for basic science research, we will accept basic science research manuscripts that have clearly described potential clinical relevance and are accessible to audiences outside a narrow laboratory research field.
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