Department of Public Health Sciences, 503 Edwards Hall, Clemson University, Clemson, SC 29634, USA; Program of Addiction Research, Clinical Care, Knowledge, and Advocacy (PARCKA) Division of Epidemiology, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Utah School of Medicine, 295 Chipeta Way Salt Lake City, UT 84132, USA.
Department of Public Health Sciences, 503 Edwards Hall, Clemson University, Clemson, SC 29634, USA.
Contraception. 2020 Nov;102(5):349-355. doi: 10.1016/j.contraception.2020.09.002. Epub 2020 Sep 14.
To explore health care providers' communication practices during contraceptive counseling for women with substance use disorders (SUDs).
In 2019, we conducted semi-structured phone interviews with a purposive sample of medical doctors and advanced practice nurses (n = 24). A two-member team analyzed these interviews for themes using deductive and inductive techniques and ATLAS.ti to manage the data.
Providers discussed that developing strong interpersonal relationships and trust is critically important to provide effective contraceptive counseling to women with SUDs. Providers reported exchanging information with patients by asking open-ended questions, tailoring discussions to patients' responses, and being direct but not judgmental. To facilitate contraceptive decision-making, providers described eliciting patients' preferences for contraceptive methods while simultaneously using their own clinical judgment and professional experience to identify which methods would be most effective and appropriate for their patients. Most often these were long-acting reversible contraceptive methods, and providers emphasized the benefits of these methods for women with SUDs.
Providers used a variety of communication strategies, some of which were grounded in the principles of patient-centered care and others that were directive, to discuss contraception with women with SUDs.
Because of past and ongoing stigma and discrimination by health care professionals and the general public, women with SUDs may be distrustful of contraceptive providers. Patient-centered contraceptive counseling may be an effective approach to increase trust and improve relationships and communication between women with SUDs and their providers. Additional research with women with SUDs is needed to understand women's experiences with and preferences for patient-provider communication during contraceptive counseling.
探讨医护人员在为有物质使用障碍(SUD)的女性提供避孕咨询时的沟通实践。
2019 年,我们对有目的抽取的医生和高级执业护士(n=24)进行了半结构式电话访谈。一个由两名成员组成的团队使用演绎和归纳技术以及 ATLAS.ti 对这些访谈进行了主题分析,以管理数据。
提供者讨论说,与 SUD 女性建立牢固的人际关系和信任至关重要,这对于提供有效的避孕咨询至关重要。提供者报告通过提出开放式问题、根据患者的反应调整讨论内容、直接但不评判来与患者交流信息。为了促进避孕决策,提供者描述了在引出患者对避孕方法的偏好的同时,同时利用自己的临床判断和专业经验来确定哪些方法对患者最有效和最合适。这些方法通常是长效可逆避孕方法,提供者强调了这些方法对 SUD 女性的益处。
提供者使用了多种沟通策略,其中一些基于以患者为中心的护理原则,而另一些则是指令性的,与 SUD 女性讨论避孕问题。
由于过去和现在医护人员和公众的污名化和歧视,有 SUD 的女性可能对避孕提供者不信任。以患者为中心的避孕咨询可能是一种有效的方法,可以增加信任,改善 SUD 女性与其提供者之间的关系和沟通。需要对有 SUD 的女性进行更多的研究,以了解女性在避孕咨询期间与提供者沟通的体验和偏好。