农村重归社会与阿片类药物的使用:确定阿巴拉契亚地区曾被监禁妇女中与健康相关的复发预测因素》(Rural Re-entry and Opioid Use: Identifying Health-Related Predictors of Relapse Among Formerly Incarcerated Women in Appalachia.

Journal of Appalachian health Pub Date : 2021-07-25 eCollection Date: 2021-01-01 DOI:10.13023/jah.0303.03
Joseph M Calvert, Megan F Dickson, Martha Tillson, Erika Pike, Michele Staton
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引用次数: 0

摘要

简介:尽管人们对曾被监禁女性的医疗保健需求有了更多了解,但在阿片类药物流行期间,农村重返社区的女性在健康、医疗保健获取和复吸之间的关系方面仍存在差距。目的:本研究以医疗保健获取为重点,探讨了与阿巴拉契亚农村重返社区的女性复吸阿片类药物有关的健康相关因素:作为一项大型研究的一部分,我们从肯塔基州的三所阿巴拉契亚监狱招募了 400 名报告有药物使用史的农村妇女。分析的重点是报告入狱前有非法阿片类药物使用史的参与者,她们还完成了出狱后 6 个月和 12 个月的跟踪采访:55%的参与者报告在12个月的跟踪调查期间再次使用阿片类药物。与在此期间未使用阿片类药物的妇女相比,复吸妇女的身心健康状况更差,在获得所需医疗服务方面遇到的障碍也更多。她们也更有可能报告说没有通常的护理来源。多变量回归分析表明,即使控制了阿片类药物使用的其他已知相关因素以及在随访期间复吸任何非阿片类药物,医疗服务利用障碍的数量仍是阿片类药物复吸的重要预测因素:利益相关者应解决阿巴拉契亚农村地区使用阿片类药物的妇女复杂的重返社会需求。这包括研究创新方法,以减少优质医疗服务利用的广泛障碍,例如实施远程医疗以治疗阿片类药物的使用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Rural Re-entry and Opioid Use: Identifying Health-Related Predictors of Relapse Among Formerly Incarcerated Women in Appalachia.

Introduction: Despite improved knowledge of the health care needs of formerly incarcerated women, there exists a gap regarding the relationship between health, health care access, and relapse among rural women returning to the community during the opioid epidemic.

Purpose: With an emphasis on health care access, this study examined health-related factors associated with opioid relapse among women reentering the community in rural Appalachia.

Methods: As part of a larger study, 400 rural women reporting a history of substance use were recruited from three Appalachian jails in Kentucky. Analyses focused on participants reporting a history of illicit opioid use prior to incarceration, who had also completed follow-up interviews at 6- and 12-months post-release from jail.

Results: Fifty-five percent of participants reported relapse to opioids during the 12-month follow-up period. Compared to those who did not use opioids during this time, women who relapsed reported poorer mental and physical health, as well as encountered more barriers to needed health services. They were also more likely to report a usual source of care. Multivariate regression analyses reveal that, even when controlling for other known correlates of opioid use and relapse to any non-opioid drug during the follow-up period, the number of barriers to health service utilization was a significant predictor of opioid relapse.

Implications: Stakeholders should address the complex reentry needs of women who use opioids in rural Appalachia. This includes examining innovative approaches to reduce extensive barriers to quality health care utilization, such as implementing telehealth for opioid use treatment.

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