Acad Med. 2024 Jun 1;99(6):613-617. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000005675. Epub 2024 Feb 27.
Stigma in health care toward people who inject drugs (PWID) is a well-described, significant barrier to quality care, resulting in poor health outcomes. Harm reduction offers a person-centered counter-framework for minimizing harm for people who use drugs. Despite the evidence in support of harm reduction, medical students typically receive minimal training on harm reduction and the care of PWID.
To fill this gap, medical students at the University of California, Los Angeles organized around the principles of harm reduction to improve the medical school curriculum related to PWID. Students screened lectures for stigmatizing language and collaborated with faculty to improve lecture materials. They partnered with a community organizer and hosted a mandatory 1-hour lecture and 30-minute discussion introducing the principles of harm reduction within an overdose prevention, recognition, and response training for first-year medical students during medical school orientation in August 2022. An anonymous online pretest and posttest survey, assessing student attitudes toward PWID, was used to evaluate the effects of the training.
A total of 156 students completed the pretest survey, and 107 students completed the pretest and posttest survey (68.5% response rate). The overall posttest mean stigma score was 1.8 (standard deviation [SD] = 0.5) and was significantly lower than the pretest mean of 2.1 (SD = 0.7; P < .0001), indicating a reduction in stigma among medical student attitudes after the course. There was statistically significant improvement in attitudes for 7 of 13 component measures.
This analysis demonstrated that the mandatory class has the capacity to improve medical student attitudes toward PWID. The authors plan to further evaluate the program's effectiveness through measuring and reporting outcomes for future student cohorts. The authors are working with curriculum directors to further incorporate harm reduction principles into other lectures and problem-based learning exercises.
医疗保健工作者对注射吸毒者(PWID)的污名化是一个描述详尽、严重的障碍,阻碍了高质量的医疗服务,导致不良的健康结果。减少伤害为吸毒者提供了一个以人为本的反框架,以最大限度地减少伤害。尽管有证据支持减少伤害,但医学生通常接受的减少伤害和 PWID 护理培训很少。
为了填补这一空白,加州大学洛杉矶分校的医学生围绕减少伤害的原则组织起来,以改善与 PWID 相关的医学院课程。学生筛选讲座中的污名化语言,并与教师合作改进讲座材料。他们与社区组织者合作,在 2022 年 8 月的医学院迎新期间,为一年级医学生举办了一场强制性的 1 小时讲座和 30 分钟讨论,介绍了过量预防、识别和反应培训中的减少伤害原则。一项评估培训效果的匿名在线预测试和后测试调查,评估了学生对 PWID 的态度。
共有 156 名学生完成了预测试调查,107 名学生完成了预测试和后测试调查(68.5%的应答率)。总体后测试平均污名分数为 1.8(标准差 [SD] = 0.5),明显低于前测的 2.1(SD = 0.7;P <.0001),表明医学生态度中的污名在课程结束后有所减少。13 项组成指标中有 7 项的态度有统计学显著改善。
这项分析表明,必修课有能力改善医学生对 PWID 的态度。作者计划通过衡量和报告未来学生群体的结果,进一步评估该计划的有效性。作者正在与课程主任合作,将减少伤害原则进一步纳入其他讲座和基于问题的学习练习中。