School of Nursing, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee; Vanderbilt Center for Child Health Policy, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee.
Department of Psychology, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee.
Womens Health Issues. 2021 Sep-Oct;31(5):455-461. doi: 10.1016/j.whi.2021.03.010. Epub 2021 Jun 2.
For reproductive-age women, medications for opioid use disorder (OUD) decrease risk of overdose death and improve outcomes but are underutilized. Our objective was to provide a qualitative description of reproductive-age women's experiences of seeking an appointment for medications for OUD.
Trained female callers placed telephone calls to a representative sample of publicly listed opioid treatment clinics and buprenorphine providers in Florida, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Michigan, Missouri, North Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, Washington, and West Virginia to obtain appointments to receive medication for OUD. Callers were randomly assigned to be pregnant or non-pregnant and have private or Medicaid-based insurance to assess differences in the experiences of access by these characteristics. The callers placed 28,651 uniquely randomized calls, 10,117 to buprenorphine-waivered prescribers and 754 to opioid treatment programs. Open-ended, qualitative data were obtained from the callers about the access experiences and were analyzed using a qualitative, iterative inductive-deductive approach. From all 28,651 total calls, there were 17,970 unique free-text comments to the question "Please give an objective play-by-play of the description of what happened in this conversation."
Analysis demonstrated a common path to obtaining an appointment. Callers frequently experienced long hold times, multiple transfers, and difficult interactions. Clinic receptionists were often mentioned as facilitating or obstructing access. Pregnant callers and those with Medicaid noted more barriers. Obtaining an appointment was commonly difficult even for these persistent, trained callers.
Interventions are needed to improve the experiences of reproductive-age women as they enter care for OUD, especially for pregnant women and those with Medicaid coverage.
对于育龄妇女,治疗阿片类药物使用障碍(OUD)的药物可以降低过量死亡风险并改善治疗效果,但这些药物的使用却严重不足。本研究旨在定性描述育龄妇女寻求 OUD 治疗药物预约的经历。
经培训的女性呼叫者向佛罗里达州、肯塔基州、马萨诸塞州、密歇根州、密苏里州、北卡罗来纳州、田纳西州、弗吉尼亚州、华盛顿州和西弗吉尼亚州的公开上市阿片类药物治疗诊所和丁丙诺啡提供者代表样本拨打电话,以获得接受 OUD 治疗药物的预约。呼叫者随机分为怀孕或未怀孕以及私人保险或医疗补助保险,以评估这些特征对获得药物的影响。呼叫者共拨打了 28651 个随机电话,其中 10117 个电话打给了有丁丙诺啡豁免权的处方医生,754 个电话打给了阿片类药物治疗项目。从呼叫者那里获得了有关访问经历的开放性、定性数据,并使用定性、迭代的归纳演绎方法进行了分析。在所有 28651 个总通话中,有 17970 个独特的自由文本回复了“请客观描述一下本次通话中发生的事情”这一问题。
分析显示了获得预约的常见途径。呼叫者经常需要长时间等待、多次转接,并且互动困难。诊所接待员经常被提及是促进还是阻碍了获得预约的机会。怀孕的呼叫者和有医疗补助的呼叫者则遇到了更多的障碍。即使对于这些有经验、有训练的呼叫者来说,获得预约通常也很困难。
需要采取干预措施来改善育龄妇女进入 OUD 治疗的体验,特别是对孕妇和有医疗补助的人群。