McCuistian Caravella, Fokuo J Konadu, Dumoit Smith Jaime, Sorensen James L, Arnold Emily A
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, USA.
Mood and Anxiety Disorders Program, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA.
Subst Abuse. 2023 Mar 11;17:11782218231158338. doi: 10.1177/11782218231158338. eCollection 2023.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, substance use disorder (SUD) treatment settings experienced several abrupt changes, including decreased admissions, reduction in services, and modified requirements for medication for substance use disorder. While these changes were implemented to facilitate the maintenance of important treatment options, the ethical consequences of such changes remained unknown. The current study aimed to explore ethical issues related to COVID-19-related changes reported by counselors in SUD treatment facilities.
From May to August 2020, we conducted 60 to 90 minutes in-depth interviews with 18 front-line staff in 1 residential and 1 outpatient treatment program, exploring issues drawn from the ethical principles of the national organization representing SUD counselors. Counselors volunteered to participate via phone or email, and participation was confidential. Interviews were conducted via videoconferencing. Topics included day-to-day experiences of ethical dilemmas in the workplace, particularly during the COVID-19 era. Interviews were recorded, transcribed, and checked for accuracy and a trained team of analysts then coded transcripts using thematic analysis.
As a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, SUD treatment programs quickly modified procedures to adhere to public health mandates while also continuing to offer care to clients. SUD counselors reported several ways their programs adapted new and creative procedures to reduce the risk of COVID-19 transmission. SUD counselors also identified several novel ethical dilemmas that occurred during the COVID-19 pandemic, often resulting from the counselor balancing the needs for responding to public health mandates with providing services to clients. There were several ways that COVID-19 related changes resulted in therapeutic challenges for some clients, and the SUD counselors highlighted ways that changes resulted in more flexible services for other clients.
This study highlights the quick response to COVID-19 that occurred within SUD treatment. While these changes resulted in novel ethical dilemmas, they also offered more flexible and client-centered approaches to treatment.
在新冠疫情期间,物质使用障碍(SUD)治疗机构经历了多项突然变化,包括入院人数减少、服务缩减以及对物质使用障碍药物治疗要求的改变。虽然实施这些变化是为了便于维持重要的治疗选择,但此类变化的伦理后果仍不明确。本研究旨在探讨SUD治疗机构中咨询师报告的与新冠疫情相关变化有关的伦理问题。
2020年5月至8月,我们对1家住院治疗项目和1家门诊治疗项目的18名一线工作人员进行了60至90分钟的深入访谈,探讨从代表SUD咨询师的全国性组织的伦理原则中提取的问题。咨询师通过电话或电子邮件自愿参与,参与过程保密。访谈通过视频会议进行。主题包括工作场所伦理困境的日常经历,尤其是在新冠疫情时代。访谈进行了录音、转录并检查准确性,然后由一组经过培训的分析师使用主题分析对转录文本进行编码。
由于新冠疫情,SUD治疗项目迅速修改程序以遵守公共卫生要求,同时继续为客户提供护理。SUD咨询师报告了他们的项目采用多种新的和创造性程序来降低新冠病毒传播风险的几种方式。SUD咨询师还识别出新冠疫情期间出现的几个新的伦理困境,这些困境通常源于咨询师在应对公共卫生要求的需求与为客户提供服务之间进行权衡。新冠疫情相关变化在几个方面给一些客户带来了治疗挑战,SUD咨询师也强调了这些变化为其他客户带来更灵活服务的方式。
本研究突出了SUD治疗对新冠疫情的快速反应。虽然这些变化带来了新的伦理困境,但也提供了更灵活且以客户为中心的治疗方法。