Division of General Academic Pediatrics, Massachusetts General Hospital for Children, Boston, MA (DMS, MN); Opioid Policy Institute, Little Rock, AR (JJKS); Children's Hospital Westmead Clinical School, Faculty of Medicine and Health; University of Sydney, Sydney Australia (TCN); Case Western Reserve School of Medicine, Cleveland, OH (SM); Friends Research Institute, Baltimore, MD (MT); Departments of Pediatrics and Mildred Stahlman Division of Neonatology, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN (SWP); Center for Child Health Policy, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN (SWP); Vanderbilt Center for Child Health Policy, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN (SWP); Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Department of Psychiatry, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA (TEW); Recovery Research Institute, Department of Psychiatry, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA (JK).
J Addict Med. 2022;16(1):77-83. doi: 10.1097/ADM.0000000000000832.
To examine the extent to which colloquial phrases used to describe opioid-exposed mother-infant dyads affects attitudes toward mothers with opioid use disorder (OUD) to assess the role stigmatizing language may have on the care of mothers with OUD.
We employed a randomized, cross-sectional, case vignette of an opioid-exposed dyad, varying on 2 factors: (1) language to describe newborn ("substance-exposed newborn" vs "addicted baby") and (2) type of maternal opioid use (injection heroin vs nonmedical use of prescription opioids). Participants were recruited using an online survey platform. Substance-related stigma, punitive-blaming, and supportive scales were constructed to assess attitudes. Two-way analyses of variance were conducted to determine mean scale differences by vignette. Posthoc analyses assessed individual item-level differences.
Among 1227 respondents, we found a small statistical difference between language and opioid type factors for the supportive scale only (F = 4.31, η2 = .004, P = 0.038), with greater agreement with supportive statements when describing injection heroin use, compared to prescription opioid use, for the "substance-exposed newborn" vignette only. In posthoc analyses, greater than 85% of respondents agreed the mother was "responsible for her opioid use," her "addiction was caused by poor choices," and that she "put her baby in danger."
We found no major differences in attitudes regardless of vignette received. Overall, respondents supported opportunities for maternal recovery yet blamed women, describing mothers as culpable for causing harm to their newborn, showcasing internally conflicting views. These views could contribute to ongoing stigma and avoidance of care among pregnant women with OUD.
考察描述阿片类药物暴露母婴对子的惯用短语在多大程度上影响了人们对患有阿片类药物使用障碍(OUD)的母亲的态度,以评估污名化语言在 OUD 母亲护理中的作用。
我们采用了一种随机、横断面、阿片类药物暴露母婴对子的病例描述,有两个因素变化:(1)描述新生儿的语言(“物质暴露新生儿”与“成瘾婴儿”),(2)母亲阿片类药物使用类型(注射海洛因与非医疗使用处方类阿片类药物)。参与者通过在线调查平台招募。构建了与物质相关的污名、惩罚性指责和支持性量表来评估态度。采用双向方差分析确定病例描述的平均量表差异。事后分析评估了个体项目水平的差异。
在 1227 名受访者中,我们发现语言和阿片类药物类型因素仅在支持性量表上存在微小的统计学差异(F=4.31,η2=0.004,P=0.038),对于“物质暴露新生儿”的病例描述,当描述注射海洛因使用时,与描述非医疗使用处方类阿片类药物相比,人们对支持性陈述的一致性更高。事后分析中,超过 85%的受访者认为母亲“对她的阿片类药物使用负责”、“她的成瘾是由糟糕的选择造成的”以及“她使她的婴儿处于危险之中”。
无论收到哪种病例描述,我们都没有发现态度上的重大差异。总体而言,受访者支持母亲康复的机会,但却指责女性,将母亲描述为对伤害新生儿负有责任,展示了内部矛盾的观点。这些观点可能导致 OUD 孕妇持续存在污名化和避免护理。