从服务提供者的角度看新冠肺炎疫情对加拿大温哥华和萨里市监督消费服务的影响

Discover public health Pub Date : 2025-01-01 Epub Date: 2025-01-20 DOI:10.1186/s12982-025-00393-0
Tyson Singh Kelsall, Michelle Olding, Tara Myketiak, Nitasha Puri, Kanna Hayashi, Thomas Kerr, Mary Clare Kennedy
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引用次数: 0

摘要

自2019冠状病毒病大流行爆发以来,加拿大因有毒药物供应而死亡的人数不断增加。新出现的证据表明,获得减少伤害服务的机会减少是一个促成因素。然而,大流行对监督消费服务(SCS)交付的确切影响尚未得到很好的表征。本研究旨在探讨大流行对加拿大温哥华和萨里的SCS递送的影响。在2021年10月至2022年3月期间,对两个SCS的工作人员进行了深入的半结构化访谈:萨里的SafePoint (n = 12)和温哥华的Insite (n = 9)。专题分析的重点是2019冠状病毒病大流行发生后,SCS交付方面的主要变化,重点是相关挑战和工作人员的紧急应对措施。与会者将主要挑战描述为:能力限制阻碍了服务获取并影响了护理质量;将前线员工的观点排除在不断发展的政策和实践决策之外;工作人员与服务使用者之间的权力变动加剧;修改的过量反应程序,加上复杂的过量报告的增加,破坏了服务的可及性和质量。工作人员对这些挑战的紧急反应包括:集体组织工作人员改变政策;个别前线员工不遵守新政策的情况;员工在工作中感到倦怠。本研究强调了与covid -19相关的服务提供变化如何给SCS工作人员和服务用户带来挑战,同时确定了工作人员为应对这些挑战所采用的策略。此外,研究结果指出了在交叉的公共卫生危机期间改善对吸毒者的护理的机会。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on supervised consumption service delivery in Vancouver and Surrey, Canada from the perspective of service providers.

Following the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, an ever-increasing number of people have died from the toxic drug supply in Canada. Emerging evidence suggests that reduced access to harm reduction services has been a contributing factor. However, the precise impacts of the pandemic on supervised consumption service (SCS) delivery have not been well characterized. The present study sought to explore the impacts of the pandemic on SCS delivery in Vancouver and Surrey, Canada. Between October 2021 and March 2022, in-depth, semi-structured interviews were conducted with staff from two SCS: SafePoint in Surrey (n = 12) and Insite in Vancouver (n = 9). Thematic analysis focused on key changes to SCS delivery after the emergence of the COVID-19 pandemic, with a focus on associated challenges and emergent staff responses. Participants described key challenges as: capacity restrictions hindering service access and compromising care quality; exclusion of frontline staff perspectives from evolving SCS policy and practice decision-making; intensified power dynamics between staff and service users; and modified overdose response procedures, combined with a rise in complex overdose presentations, undermining service accessibility and quality. Emergent staff responses to these challenges included: collective staff organizing for changes to policy; individual frontline staff non-compliance with emerging policies; and staff experiencing burnout in their roles. This study highlights how COVID-19-related changes to service delivery produced challenges for SCS staff and service users, while identifying strategies employed by staff to address these challenges. Additionally, the findings point to opportunities to improve care for people who use drugs during intersecting public health crises.

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