Behavioral Medicine Department, Butler Hospital (SRK, BJA, MDS); Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Providence, RI (SRK, GLB); Stanley Street Treatment and Resources, Inc., Fall River (GLB); Boston University School of Public Health, Boston, MA (MDS).
J Addict Med. 2019 May/Jun;13(3):215-219. doi: 10.1097/ADM.0000000000000482.
Normative perceptions about substance use are well-established predictors of substance use risk behaviors, yet no research to date has examined how people who use heroin perceive the drug use behaviors and their association with personal behaviors. In a sample of persons seeking heroin withdrawal, we compared normative beliefs (descriptive norms) about others' drug use behaviors, and examined the association between normative beliefs and behaviors.
Participants (n = 241) were patients undergoing short-term inpatient heroin withdrawal management in Massachusetts. t-Tests were used to compare participants' perceptions about various substance use behaviors among both US adults and persons seeking heroin withdrawal at the same site. We also examined associations between participants' normative beliefs and personal substance use behaviors.
Participants significantly overestimated drug-related risk behaviors of adults nationally; overall, participants estimated that 44.7% had tried heroin, 37.6% had injected drugs in the past year, and 63.2% had smoked marijuana in the past month when actual national rates are 2.0%, 0.3%, and 5.5%, respectively. Participants also held significant misperceptions about contemporaneous patients in the heroin withdrawal program; behaviors about sharing works, diverting buprenorphine or methadone, and exchanging sex for drugs or money were most substantially overestimated. Normative perceptions were associated with a range of personal drug-using behaviors (eg, injection drug use, exchanging sex for drugs or money).
Consistent with existing substance use norms research, participants in the current sample tended to overestimate others' engagement in risky substance use, and these normative perceptions were associated with increased personal risk. Leveraging norms in heroin harm reduction interventions may hold substantial promise.
关于物质使用的规范认知是物质使用风险行为的良好预测指标,但迄今为止,尚无研究探讨使用海洛因的人如何看待他们的药物使用行为及其与个人行为的关联。在一组寻求海洛因戒断的人中,我们比较了对他人药物使用行为的规范信念(描述性规范),并研究了规范信念与行为之间的关联。
参与者(n=241)是马萨诸塞州接受短期住院海洛因戒断管理的患者。使用 t 检验比较了参与者对美国成年人和同一地点寻求海洛因戒断的人之间各种药物使用行为的看法。我们还研究了参与者的规范信念与个人药物使用行为之间的关联。
参与者明显高估了全国成年人与药物相关的风险行为;总体而言,参与者估计有 44.7%的人尝试过海洛因,37.6%的人在过去一年中注射过毒品,63.2%的人在过去一个月中吸食过大麻,而实际全国比率分别为 2.0%、0.3%和 5.5%。参与者对海洛因戒断计划中的同期患者也存在重大误解;分享工作、转移丁丙诺啡或美沙酮以及用性换取毒品或金钱的行为被严重高估。规范认知与一系列个人药物使用行为(例如,注射药物使用、用性换取毒品或金钱)相关。
与现有的物质使用规范研究一致,当前样本中的参与者往往高估他人参与高风险物质使用的情况,并且这些规范认知与个人风险增加有关。在海洛因减少伤害干预中利用规范具有很大的潜力。