Anastario Mike, Leston Jessica, Crisp Carolyn, Lee Crystal, Rink Elizabeth
Florida International University, Miami, FL, USA.
Northwest Portland Area Indian Health Board, Portland, OR, USA.
J Ethn Subst Abuse. 2023;22(4):804-826. doi: 10.1080/15332640.2022.2043798. Epub 2022 Mar 10.
This study concerns the perspectives of Indigenous persons who use injection drugs (IPWIDs) and key stakeholders across multiple sectors regarding healthcare service and treatment accessibility in the United States. Sixty in-depth interviews were undertaken with selected participants (30 people who use injection drugs and 30 stakeholders) across three non-urban locations in the United States. An inductive analytic approach was used to explore perspectives regarding healthcare accessibility gaps. IPWIDs described injecting stimulants, opioids, and diverted medications for opioid use disorder, as well as having unstable access to sterile syringes. Often, the most accessible treatment for IPWID substance use was engagement with punitive aspects of the criminal justice system. While local health and social services were described as providing limited or inadequate services for IPWIDs, human capital deficiencies in those agencies and institutions often reinforced barriers to accessibility for IPWIDs, further aggravating the epidemics of Hepatitis C Virus infection and overdose risk in Indigenous communities. Decolonizing approaches to IPWID-centered services are urgently needed to reduce disparities in transmission of infectious diseases and other health consequences of injection drug use among American Indian people. Potential pathways forward include moving away from punitive treatment of IPWIDs by the criminal justice system and toward local, tribally-centered, culturally appropriate treatment models. We identify an urgent need to provide reliable and local access to sterile injection equipment and opioid substitution treatment on or near reservations.
本研究关注美国使用注射毒品的原住民(IPWIDs)以及多个部门的关键利益相关者对医疗服务和治疗可及性的看法。在美国三个非城市地区,对选定的参与者(30名使用注射毒品的人和30名利益相关者)进行了60次深入访谈。采用归纳分析方法来探讨医疗可及性差距方面的观点。IPWIDs描述了注射兴奋剂、阿片类药物以及用于阿片类药物使用障碍的转用药物,同时获得无菌注射器的机会不稳定。通常,IPWID药物使用最容易获得的治疗方式是与刑事司法系统的惩罚性方面打交道。虽然当地卫生和社会服务部门被描述为为IPWIDs提供有限或不足的服务,但这些机构和组织中的人力资本不足往往强化了IPWIDs获得服务的障碍,进一步加剧了原住民社区丙型肝炎病毒感染和过量用药风险的流行。迫切需要采取去殖民化方法来提供以IPWID为中心的服务,以减少美国印第安人之间注射毒品传播传染病和其他健康后果方面的差距。前进的潜在途径包括摆脱刑事司法系统对IPWIDs的惩罚性治疗,转向以部落为中心、符合文化习惯的当地治疗模式。我们确定迫切需要在保留地或其附近提供可靠的当地无菌注射设备和阿片类药物替代治疗。