药物使用障碍孕妇和育儿者护理中的管理偏见。

Briana E Kramer, Nicole Warren, Mishka Terplan, Andreea A Creanga, Kelly M Bower
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:意外用药过量是马里兰州妊娠相关死亡的主要原因,并且是可以预防的。污名化导致产妇脱离卫生保健系统,卫生保健专业人员可能参与污名化过程。我们旨在为马里兰州的孕产妇保健专业人员开发和评估与物质使用障碍(SUD)相关的耻辱和偏见培训。方法:我们采用社区参与的方法,对妊娠期与SUD相关的耻辱感和偏见进行培训,并在马里兰州分娩医院的孕产妇保健专业人员中实施。我们进行了一项多方法的培训前评估,使用了实施效果的定量分析、岗前知识测试、满意度调查和医院便利会议日志的定性分析。结果:有1145名卫生专业人员完成培训。培训后知识测试成绩显著提高,最大的变化是在怀孕期间阿片类药物使用障碍药物的安全性。超过90%的参与者认为培训是相关的,并计划积极使用他们所学到的知识。定性反馈表明,培训可能会增加对患者群体的同情,并有助于实践的改变。讨论:我们的评估表明,这种培训在增加知识方面是有价值的,有效的,并且是治疗妊娠和产后SUD患者的卫生保健专业人员实践变化的潜在催化剂。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Managing Bias in the Care of Pregnant and Parenting People with Substance Use Disorder.

Background: Unintentional overdose is the leading cause of pregnancy-associated death in Maryland and is preventable. Stigma contributes to birthing peoples' disengagement with the health care system, and health care professionals may participate in stigmatizing processes. We aimed to develop and evaluate a training on stigma and bias related to substance use disorder (SUD) for maternal health care professionals in Maryland.

Methods: We used a community-engaged process to develop a training on stigma and bias related to SUD in pregnancy and implemented it with Maryland maternal health care professionals employed in birth hospital settings. We conducted a multimethod pre-post training evaluation, using a quantitative analysis of implementation reach, a pre-post knowledge test, a satisfaction survey, and a qualitative analysis of hospital facilitation meeting logs.

Results: The training was completed by 1145 health care professionals. Knowledge test scores increased significantly after training, with the greatest change noted in the safety of medications for opioid use disorder during pregnancy. Over 90% of participants found the training relevant and planned to actively use what they learned. Qualitative feedback indicated the training may increase empathy with the patient population and contribute to practice changes.

Discussion: Our evaluation suggests that this training is valuable, effective at increasing knowledge, and a potential catalyst for practice change among health care professionals working with pregnant and postpartum patients with SUD.

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