Center for Justice Research and Evaluation, Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority, Chicago, Illinois, USA.
Division of General Internal Medicine, The Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, USA.
Subst Use Misuse. 2023;58(12):1493-1504. doi: 10.1080/10826084.2023.2227698. Epub 2023 Jun 26.
Fatal opioid overdoses continue to break historical records. Stigma toward people with opioid use disorder (OUD) can negatively impact treatment access, retention, and recovery. Attitudes and beliefs of police officers can profoundly shape key discretionary decisions. Therefore, we examined police officer views indicating stigma toward those with OUD.We administered an online survey to select Illinois police departments using a stratified random sampling strategy with a final sample of 248 officers from 27 police departments. We asked officers questions measuring stigmatizing attitudes toward people with OUD including distrust, blame, shame, and fear. We found officers held somewhat stigmatizing views with a mean score of 4.0 on a scale of 1 (least stigmatic) to 6 (most stigmatic).Regression results showed certain officer characteristics were associated with more stigmatizing attitudes of blaming and distrust of those with OUD, including gender, education, race, years in policing, and department size.Since most officers in the sample held at least some stigmatizing views toward people with OUD, this may impede the feasibility and acceptability of criminal justice interventions meant to improve behavioral health, such as police deflection programs that link people who use drugs to treatment in lieu of arrest. Departments should offer officer training and education on substance use disorders, treatment for addiction, and the potential for a person's recovery. Training should allow officers to hear directly from, or learn about, personal experiences of people who use drugs and have been in recovery, as this type of interaction has been shown to reduce stigma.
致命的阿片类药物过量死亡继续打破历史记录。对患有阿片类药物使用障碍(OUD)的人的污名化会对治疗的获得、保留和康复产生负面影响。警察的态度和信念可以深刻地影响关键的自由裁量决定。因此,我们研究了警察对患有 OUD 的人的看法,以了解他们对污名化的看法。我们通过分层随机抽样策略对选定的伊利诺伊州警察局进行了在线调查,最终从 27 个警察局中抽取了 248 名警察作为样本。我们向警察提出了衡量对患有 OUD 的人存在污名化态度的问题,包括不信任、指责、羞耻和恐惧。我们发现,警察的看法有些污名化,在 1(最不污名化)到 6(最污名化)的量表上平均得分为 4.0。回归结果表明,某些警官的特征与对 OUD 患者更具指责性和不信任性的态度有关,包括性别、教育程度、种族、警务工作年限和部门规模。由于大多数样本中的警察对患有 OUD 的人至少持有一些污名化的看法,这可能会妨碍旨在改善行为健康的刑事司法干预措施的可行性和可接受性,例如将吸毒者与治疗联系起来而不是逮捕的警察转移计划。各部门应提供有关药物使用障碍、成瘾治疗以及个人康复潜力的警官培训和教育。培训应允许警察直接听取或了解吸毒者和康复者的个人经历,因为这种互动已被证明可以减少污名化。