Yale School of Medicine, Department of Psychiatry, New Haven, CT 06519, USA; Race Equity and Addiction Lab at Yale, New Haven, New Haven, CT 06519, USA.
Yale School of Medicine, Department of Psychiatry, New Haven, CT 06519, USA; Yale Stress Center, New Haven, CT 06511, USA.
J Subst Use Addict Treat. 2024 Jan;156:209184. doi: 10.1016/j.josat.2023.209184. Epub 2023 Oct 21.
To inform approaches for adapting substance use treatment for Black adults, the aim of this study was to thematically analyze the stressors, triggers for substance use, and neutral/relaxing events reported among Black adults who participated in a lab paradigm.
The sample included 36 Black adults (mean age [years] = 37.47, SD = 7.30; 53 % male, 12 (33 %) with alcohol use disorder, 12 (33 %) with cocaine use disorder, and 12 (33 %) healthy controls). All participants provided detailed stimulus and response context information on the most stressful event they experienced in the past year, an event that involved substance use, and a neutral/relaxing event in a structured interview using a scene development questionnaire, and this information was utilized to generate a personalized imagery script for each event using standardized procedures. Thematic analyses identified the key themes reported within scripts.
Consistent with a prior thematic analysis on a majority White sample, we found the following themes for the stress scripts: Relational (Violation, Loss, Parenting, Betrayal, Isolation vs. support), Environmental (Housing, Legal), and Achievement (Employment, Role in household). However, our analyses also resulted in new stress themes: Relational (Violation-Racial Microaggressions) and Institutional (Time Wasted). The substance use scripts consisted of the following trigger themes: Social (Social Facilitation, Socially-Sanctioned Substance Use Event, Exposure to Substance Use Friends/Associates), Internal (Free Time, Boredom, Thoughts of Using Substance, Frustration, Reward), and Environment (Availability of Substance, Celebration, Party Environment, Food, Hot Day, Money/Payday). The neutral/relaxing scripts themes were: Outdoor Activities (Admiring Nature, People Watching, Observing Surroundings, Enjoying the Sun, Playing in the Sand, Walking), Quiet Activities (Silence/Quiet, Prayer, Reading), and Indoor Activities (Radio, Television, Bath/Shower, Bed/Chair, Observing from a Window). We found sex differences across scripts.
The results suggest that Black people experience unique stressors (e.g., institutional and racial stressors) that are important to consider when modifying treatment to improve outcomes among this group. In addition to stressors, this study also identified high-risk situations involving triggers for use. Taken together these findings suggest targets for the tailoring of coping strategies that could be incorporated for the development of culturally relevant behavioral treatment for SUD.
为了为黑人群体提供适应物质使用治疗的方法,本研究旨在对参与实验室范式的黑人群体报告的压力源、物质使用触发因素和中性/放松事件进行主题分析。
该样本包括 36 名黑人群体(平均年龄[岁] = 37.47,标准差 = 7.30;53%为男性,12 名(33%)有酒精使用障碍,12 名(33%)有可卡因使用障碍,12 名(33%)为健康对照组)。所有参与者在结构化访谈中使用场景发展问卷详细描述了他们在过去一年中经历的最具压力的事件、涉及物质使用的事件以及中性/放松的事件,并利用这些信息根据标准化程序为每个事件生成个性化的意象脚本。主题分析确定了脚本中报告的关键主题。
与先前对大多数白人样本的主题分析一致,我们发现压力脚本的以下主题:关系(侵犯、丧失、育儿、背叛、孤立与支持)、环境(住房、法律)和成就(就业、家庭角色)。然而,我们的分析还产生了新的压力主题:关系(侵犯-种族微侵犯)和机构(浪费时间)。物质使用脚本包括以下触发主题:社交(社交促进、社会认可的物质使用事件、接触使用物质的朋友/同伴)、内部(空闲时间、无聊、使用物质的想法、挫败感、奖励)和环境(物质的可用性、庆祝活动、聚会环境、食物、炎热的天气、金钱/发薪日)。中性/放松的脚本主题是:户外活动(欣赏自然、观察人、观察周围环境、享受阳光、玩沙、散步)、安静活动(安静/安静、祈祷、阅读)和室内活动(收音机、电视、洗澡/淋浴、床/椅子、从窗户观察)。我们发现脚本之间存在性别差异。
研究结果表明,黑人经历独特的压力源(例如,制度和种族压力源),在修改治疗方法以改善该群体的治疗效果时,这些压力源非常重要。除了压力源,本研究还确定了涉及使用触发因素的高危情况。这些发现共同表明,可以针对特定人群制定应对策略的目标,以便为物质使用障碍的行为治疗制定文化相关的治疗方案。