University of Washington School of Medicine, Department of Emergency Medicine, Seattle, Washington.
University of Washington School of Public Health, Department of Health Systems and Population Health, Seattle, Washington.
West J Emerg Med. 2023 Feb 25;24(2):218-227. doi: 10.5811/westjem.2022.12.58396.
Methamphetamine use is on the rise with increasing emergency department (ED) visits, behavioral health crises, and deaths associated with use and overdose. Emergency clinicians describe methamphetamine use as a significant problem with high resource utilization and violence against staff, but little is known about the patient's perspective. In this study our objective was to identify the motivations for initiation and continued methamphetamine use among people who use methamphetamine and their experiences in the ED to guide future ED-based approaches.
This was a qualitative study of adults residing in the state of Washington in 2020, who used methamphetamine in the prior 30 days, met criteria for moderate- to high-risk use, reported recently receiving care in the ED, and had phone access. Twenty individuals were recruited to complete a brief survey and semi-structured interview, which was recorded and transcribed prior to being coded. Modified grounded theory guided the analysis, and the interview guide and codebook were iteratively refined. Three investigators coded the interviews until consensus was reached. Data was collected until thematic saturation.
Participants described a shifting line that separates the positive attributes from the negative consequences of using methamphetamine. Many initially used methamphetamine to enhance social interactions, combat boredom, and escape difficult circumstances by numbing the senses. However, continued use regularly led to isolation, ED visits for the medical and psychological sequelae of methamphetamine use, and engagement in increasingly risky behaviors. Because of their overwhelmingly frustrating experiences in the past, interviewees anticipated difficult interactions with healthcare clinicians, leading to combativeness in the ED, avoidance of the ED at all costs, and downstream medical complications. Participants desired a non-judgmental conversation and linkage to outpatient social resources and addiction treatment.
Methamphetamine use can lead patients to seek care in the ED, where they often feel stigmatized and are provided little assistance. Emergency clinicians should acknowledge addiction as a chronic condition, address acute medical and psychiatric symptoms adequately, and provide positive connections to addiction and medical resources. Future work should incorporate the perspectives of people who use methamphetamine into ED-based programs and interventions.
随着急诊部(ED)就诊人数的增加、行为健康危机的增加以及与使用和过量相关的死亡人数的增加,甲基苯丙胺的使用呈上升趋势。急诊临床医生将甲基苯丙胺的使用描述为一个严重的问题,具有高资源利用率和对工作人员的暴力行为,但对患者的观点知之甚少。在这项研究中,我们的目的是确定使用甲基苯丙胺的人开始和继续使用甲基苯丙胺的动机,以及他们在急诊部的经历,以指导未来基于急诊部的方法。
这是一项对 2020 年居住在华盛顿州的成年人的定性研究,他们在过去 30 天内使用了甲基苯丙胺,符合中到高度风险使用标准,报告最近在急诊部接受过治疗,并且可以使用电话。招募了 20 名参与者完成简短的调查和半结构化访谈,访谈内容在进行编码之前被记录并转录。改良的扎根理论指导了分析,访谈指南和代码本被反复修改。三名研究人员对访谈进行编码,直到达成共识。数据收集直到主题达到饱和。
参与者描述了一条将使用甲基苯丙胺的积极属性与消极后果分开的变化线。许多人最初使用甲基苯丙胺来增强社交互动,消除感官上的无聊和逃避困难的情况。然而,持续使用经常导致孤立、因使用甲基苯丙胺而产生的医疗和心理后果导致的急诊部就诊,以及越来越冒险的行为。由于过去经历的压倒性挫折,受访者预计会与医疗保健临床医生进行困难的互动,导致在急诊部好斗、不惜一切代价避免急诊部就诊,以及下游的医疗并发症。参与者希望进行非评判性的对话,并与门诊社会资源和成瘾治疗建立联系。
甲基苯丙胺的使用可能导致患者到急诊部就诊,他们在急诊部经常感到受到歧视,并且几乎没有得到帮助。急诊临床医生应将成瘾视为一种慢性疾病,充分解决急性医疗和精神症状,并提供与成瘾和医疗资源的积极联系。未来的工作应该将使用甲基苯丙胺者的观点纳入基于急诊部的计划和干预措施中。