妊娠期物质使用:识别污名并改善护理。

IF 5.1 Q1 SUBSTANCE ABUSE
Substance Abuse and Rehabilitation Pub Date : 2021-11-23 eCollection Date: 2021-01-01 DOI:10.2147/SAR.S319180
Andrea Weber, Benjamin Miskle, Alison Lynch, Stephan Arndt, Laura Acion
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引用次数: 30

摘要

这篇综述探讨了污名对使用药物的孕妇的影响。对吸毒者的污名化是普遍存在的,并通过将成瘾定性为一种弱点,培养破坏获得治疗和戒除成瘾所需的个人资源的信念,包括自我效能感、寻求帮助和他们应该得到治疗的信念,对药物使用者的护理产生负面影响。耻辱感在多个层面上起作用,指责人们有问题,然后使他们难以获得帮助,但尽管如此,大多数使用药物的孕妇在得知自己怀孕后减少或停止使用药物。语言、关于性别角色的信念以及关于是否适合养育子女的态度是表达和延续耻辱的社会因素,同时促进惩罚而不是治疗方法。由于使用药物的人不适合为人父母的污名化态度,使用药物的孕妇更有可能被筛查是否使用药物,转到儿童福利服务机构,并被剥夺父母的权利;有色人种更有可能出现这些结果。各种治疗方案可以成功地支持吸毒孕妇人群的康复,但包括孕妇在内的所有人群的治疗都没有得到充分利用,需要更多的知识来了解如何持续参与治疗和康复活动。在整个围产期与使用药物的孕妇一起工作时,为了消除耻辱感,护理人员应该利用创伤知情的方法,将减少伤害和动机性访谈结合起来,重点是建立信任,增强自我效能,加强个人技能和资源,以优化父母-婴儿的健康。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Substance Use in Pregnancy: Identifying Stigma and Improving Care.

Substance Use in Pregnancy: Identifying Stigma and Improving Care.

This review examines the impact of stigma on pregnant people who use substances. Stigma towards people who use drugs is pervasive and negatively impacts the care of substance-using people by characterizing addiction as a weakness and fostering beliefs that undermine the personal resources needed to access treatment and recover from addiction, including self-efficacy, help seeking and belief that they deserve care. Stigma acts on multiple levels by blaming people for having a problem and then making it difficult for them to get help, but in spite of this, most pregnant people who use substances reduce or stop using when they learn they are pregnant. Language, beliefs about gender roles, and attitudes regarding fitness for parenting are social factors that can express and perpetuate stigma while facilitating punitive rather than therapeutic approaches. Because of stigmatizing attitudes that a person who uses substances is unfit to parent, pregnant people who use substances are at heightened risk of being screened for substance use, referred to child welfare services, and having their parental rights taken away; these outcomes are even more likely for people of color. Various treatment options can successfully support recovery in substance-using pregnant populations, but treatment is underutilized in all populations including pregnant people, and more knowledge is needed on how to sustain engagement in treatment and recovery activities. To combat stigma when working with substance-using pregnant people throughout the peripartum period, caregivers should utilize a trauma-informed approach that incorporates harm reduction and motivational interviewing with a focus on building trust, enhancing self-efficacy, and strengthening the personal skills and resources needed to optimize health of the parent-baby dyad.

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