The National Center for Integrated Behavioral Health in Primary Care, Rochester, Minnesota and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Department of Family Medicine and Community Health, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Ann Fam Med. 2023 Feb;21(Suppl 2):S31-S38. doi: 10.1370/afm.2920.
We undertook a study to examine how stigma influences the uptake of training on medication for opioid use disorder (MOUD) in primary care academic programs.
We conducted a qualitative study of 23 key stakeholders responsible for implementing MOUD training in their academic primary care training programs that were participants in a learning collaborative in 2018. We assessed barriers to and facilitators of successful program implementation and used an integrated approach to develop a codebook and analyze the data.
Participants represented the family medicine, internal medicine, and physician assistant fields, and they included trainees. Most participants described clinician and institutional attitudes, misperceptions, and biases that enabled or hindered MOUD training. Perceptions included concerns that patients with OUD are "manipulative" or "drug seeking." Elements of stigma in the origin domain (ie, beliefs by primary care clinicians or the community that OUD is a choice and not a disease), the enacted domain (eg, hospital bylaws banning MOUD and clinicians declining to obtain an X-Waiver to prescribe MOUD), and the intersectional domain (eg, inadequate attention to patient needs) were perceived as major barriers to MOUD training by most respondents. Participants described strategies that improved the uptake of training, including giving attention to clinician concerns, clarifying the biology of OUD, and ameliorating clinician fears of being ill equipped to provide care for patients.
OUD-related stigma was commonly reported in training programs and impeded the uptake of MOUD training. Potential strategies to address stigma in the training context, beyond providing content on effective evidence-based treatments, include addressing the concerns of primary care clinicians and incorporating the chronic care framework into OUD treatment.
我们开展了一项研究,旨在探讨污名化如何影响初级保健学术项目中接受阿片类药物使用障碍(MOUD)治疗培训的情况。
我们对 23 名主要利益相关者进行了一项定性研究,这些利益相关者负责在其学术初级保健培训计划中实施 MOUD 培训,这些计划是 2018 年学习合作的参与者。我们评估了成功实施计划的障碍和促进因素,并采用综合方法开发代码本并分析数据。
参与者代表家庭医学、内科和医师助理领域,包括受训者。大多数参与者描述了使 MOUD 培训得以实施或受阻的临床医生和机构态度、误解和偏见。这些看法包括担心患有 OUD 的患者是“善于操纵”或“寻求药物”的。污名化在起源领域的要素(即初级保健临床医生或社区认为 OUD 是一种选择而不是一种疾病的信念)、实施领域(例如,医院章程禁止 MOUD 和临床医生拒绝获得处方 MOUD 的 X 豁免)和交叉领域(例如,对患者需求的关注不足)被大多数受访者认为是 MOUD 培训的主要障碍。参与者描述了提高培训接受度的策略,包括关注临床医生的关注、澄清 OUD 的生物学以及减轻临床医生担心自己没有能力为患者提供护理的恐惧。
在培训计划中经常报告与 OUD 相关的污名化,并阻碍了 MOUD 培训的接受度。在培训背景下解决污名化问题的潜在策略,除了提供有效的循证治疗内容外,还包括解决初级保健临床医生的关注问题,并将慢性护理框架纳入 OUD 治疗中。