Division of General Internal Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Department of Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Subst Abus. 2020;41(4):519-525. doi: 10.1080/08897077.2019.1671942. Epub 2019 Oct 22.
Hospital discharges against medical advice (AMA) is associated with negative health outcomes and re-admissions. Patients with substance use disorders (SUD) are up to three times more likely to be discharged AMA as compared to those without SUD. Studies suggest that undertreated withdrawal and a perception of stigma may increase the risk, however, to date, there are no published qualitative studies exploring the specific reasons why patients with SUD leave prematurely. Semi-structured interviews with patients ( = 15) with SUD with documented AMA discharges from our hospital between 9/2017 and 9/2018. Maximum variation sampling was employed to display diversity across gender, race, age, and type of substance use disorder (alcohol vs opioids). Patients were interviewed until no new concepts emerged from additional interviews. Two coders separately coded all transcripts and reconciled code assignments. Four core issues were identified as patients' reasons for leaving the hospital prematurely: undertreated withdrawal and ongoing craving to use drugs, uncontrolled acute and chronic pain, stigma and discrimination by hospital staff about their SUD, and hospital restrictions, including not being allowed to intermittently leave the hospital floor. For patients with histories of criminal involvement, being hospitalized reminded them of being incarcerated. These findings shed light on the reasons patients with SUD are discharged from the hospital AMA, an event that is associated with increased thirty-day mortality and hospital re-admission. AMA discharges represent missed opportunities for the health care system to engage with patients struggling with a SUD. Our findings support the need for inpatient addiction treatment, particularly for management of withdrawal and co-occurring pain, and the need to address health care provider associated stigma surrounding addiction.
医院未经医嘱提前出院(AMA)与负面健康结果和再次入院有关。与没有物质使用障碍(SUD)的患者相比,患有物质使用障碍的患者提前出院 AMA 的可能性高出三倍。研究表明,治疗不足的戒断和对耻辱感的认知可能会增加这种风险,但迄今为止,还没有发表的定性研究探讨患有 SUD 的患者提前离开的具体原因。
我们对 2017 年 9 月至 2018 年 9 月期间因 AMA 出院的、有记录的 SUD 患者( = 15)进行了半结构化访谈。采用最大变异抽样法,以展示性别、种族、年龄和物质使用障碍类型(酒精与阿片类药物)的多样性。对患者进行访谈,直到从其他访谈中没有出现新的概念。两名编码员分别对所有转录本进行编码,并协调编码分配。
确定了四个核心问题,这些问题是患者提前离开医院的原因:戒断治疗不足和持续的吸毒欲望、未得到控制的急性和慢性疼痛、医院工作人员对他们的 SUD 的耻辱感和歧视,以及医院的限制,包括不允许间歇性离开医院楼层。对于有犯罪记录的患者来说,住院让他们想起了被监禁的经历。
这些发现揭示了 SUD 患者提前出院 AMA 的原因,这一事件与三十天死亡率和医院再次入院率增加有关。AMA 出院代表着医疗保健系统错过了与患有 SUD 的患者接触的机会。我们的发现支持需要住院成瘾治疗,特别是管理戒断和共同发生的疼痛,以及需要解决与成瘾相关的医疗保健提供者的耻辱感。