School of Public Health, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
Department of Community Health and Epidemiology, Department of Emergency Medicine, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.
PLoS One. 2021 May 19;16(5):e0251860. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0251860. eCollection 2021.
We described public views toward harm reduction among Canadian adults and tested a social exposure model predicting support for these contentious services, drawing on theories in the morality policy, intergroup relations, addiction, and media communication literatures. A quota sample of 4645 adults (18+ years), randomly drawn from an online research panel and stratified to match age and sex distributions of adults within and across Canadian provinces, was recruited in June 2018. Participants completed survey items assessing support for harm reduction for people who use drugs (PWUD) and for seven harm reduction interventions. Additional items assessed exposure to media coverage on harm reduction, and scales assessing stigma toward PWUD (α = .72), personal familiarity with PWUD (α = .84), and disease model beliefs about addiction (α = .79). Most (64%) Canadians supported harm reduction (provincial estimates = 60% - 73%). Five of seven interventions received majority support, including: outreach (79%), naloxone (72%), drug checking (70%), needle distribution (60%) and supervised drug consumption (55%). Low-threshold opioid agonist treatment and safe inhalation interventions received less support (49% and 44%). Our social exposure model, adjusted for respondent sex, household income, political views, and education, exhibited good fit and accounted for 17% of variance in public support for harm reduction. Personal familiarity with PWUD and disease model beliefs about addiction were directly associated with support (βs = .07 and -0.10, respectively), and indirectly influenced public support via stigmatized attitudes toward PWUD (βs = 0.01 and -0.01, respectively). Strategies to increase support for harm reduction could problematize certain disease model beliefs (e.g., "There are only two possibilities for an alcoholic or drug addict-permanent abstinence or death") and creating opportunities to reduce social distance between PWUD, the public, and policy makers.
我们描述了加拿大成年人对减少伤害的看法,并测试了一个社会暴露模型,该模型预测了对这些有争议的服务的支持,该模型借鉴了道德政策、群体间关系、成瘾和媒体传播文献中的理论。2018 年 6 月,从一个在线研究小组中随机抽取了 4645 名成年人(18 岁以上)作为配额样本,并按年龄和性别的分布与加拿大各省的成年人进行了分层匹配。参与者完成了评估对吸毒者(PWUD)和七种减少伤害干预措施的支持的调查项目。其他项目评估了对减少伤害的媒体报道的接触,以及评估对 PWUD 的污名化(α=0.72)、个人对 PWUD 的熟悉程度(α=0.84)和对成瘾的疾病模型信念(α=0.79)的量表。大多数(64%)加拿大人支持减少伤害(省级估计值=60%-73%)。七种干预措施中有五种得到了多数支持,包括:外展(79%)、纳洛酮(72%)、药物检测(70%)、针具分发(60%)和监督吸毒(55%)。低门槛阿片类激动剂治疗和安全吸入干预措施得到的支持较少(49%和 44%)。我们的社会暴露模型,根据受访者的性别、家庭收入、政治观点和教育进行了调整,具有良好的拟合度,解释了公众对减少伤害的支持率 17%的差异。个人对 PWUD 的熟悉程度和对成瘾的疾病模型信念与支持直接相关(βs=0.07 和-0.10),并通过对 PWUD 的污名化态度间接影响公众支持(βs=0.01 和-0.01)。增加对减少伤害的支持的策略可能会使某些疾病模型信念(例如,“酗酒者或吸毒者只有两种可能——永久戒酒或死亡”)成为问题,并为吸毒者、公众和政策制定者之间减少社会距离创造机会。