Madison Thulien, Reith Charlesworth, Haleigh Anderson, Rainbow Dykeman, Katey Kincaid, Kali Sedgemore, Rod Knight, Danya Fast
British Columbia Center on Substance Use, Vancouver, Canada.
Youth Health Advisory Council, Vancouver, Canada.
Can J Addict. 2022 Jun;13(2 Suppl):S62-S71.
Youth experiencing street-involvement are particularly vulnerable to substance use-related harms. Since an overdose public health emergency was declared in British Columbia (BC) in 2016, there have been concerted efforts to expand youths' access to integrated mental health and substance use treatment across the province. The present study sought to explore how youth were navigating this rapidly evolving treatment landscape.
Focus groups were conducted with youth experiencing street-involvement in three BC cities, followed by a summit event in Vancouver. Audio recordings were transcribed verbatim and coded thematically alongside observational field notes. All activities were undertaken in collaboration with a Youth Advisory Council.
Across BC, youth expressed desires to achieve aspects of what some called a "normal life" following treatment, which required having "somewhere to go next." In the absence of desirable housing and adequate income, youth were often left with the crushing sense that, despite their efforts, treatment would not ultimately help them to "get somewhere better." Negative experiences in treatment settings were also shaped by the files that "followed" youth across care settings, inappropriate information sharing between providers, and an overemphasis on pharmacotherapies (namely, opioid agonist therapies and psychotropic medications).
Our findings point to the inability of existing services and systems to address entrenched marginalization and chronic instability, and underscore the importance of relationship-, trust-, and future-building to providing treatment and care to youth. Young people must be empowered with control over their treatment trajectories, including decision-making surrounding pharmacotherapies and information sharing.
经历街头流浪生活的青少年尤其容易受到与物质使用相关的伤害。自2016年不列颠哥伦比亚省(BC省)宣布发生药物过量公共卫生紧急情况以来,全省一直在齐心协力扩大青少年获得综合心理健康和物质使用治疗的机会。本研究旨在探讨青少年如何在这一迅速演变的治疗格局中前行。
在BC省的三个城市对经历街头流浪生活的青少年进行了焦点小组访谈,随后在温哥华举办了一次峰会活动。对音频记录进行逐字转录,并与观察性实地笔记一起进行主题编码。所有活动均与一个青年咨询委员会合作开展。
在BC省各地,青少年表示希望在接受治疗后实现一些人所谓的“正常生活”,这需要“有下一步可去之处”。在缺乏理想住房和足够收入的情况下,青少年常常有一种沉重的感觉,即尽管他们付出了努力,但治疗最终并不能帮助他们“过得更好”。治疗环境中的负面经历还受到在不同护理机构“跟随”青少年的档案、提供者之间不适当的信息共享以及对药物治疗(即阿片类激动剂疗法和精神药物)的过度强调的影响。
我们的研究结果表明,现有服务和系统无法解决根深蒂固的边缘化和长期不稳定问题,并强调了建立关系、信任和展望未来对于为青少年提供治疗和护理的重要性。必须赋予年轻人对其治疗轨迹的控制权,包括围绕药物治疗和信息共享的决策。