Department of Public Health and Community Medicine, Tufts University School of Medicine, Boston, MA, USA.
Division of Epidemiology, College of Public Health, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, USA.
Soc Sci Med. 2024 Apr;346:116660. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2024.116660. Epub 2024 Feb 13.
In 2020, 2.8 million people required substance use disorder (SUD) treatment in nonmetropolitan or 'rural' areas in the U.S. Among this population, only 10% received SUD treatment from a specialty facility, and 1 in 500 received medication for opioid use disorder (MOUD). We explored the context surrounding barriers to SUD treatment in the rural United States.
We conducted semi-structured, in-depth interviews from 2018 to 2019 to assess barriers to SUD treatment among people who use drugs (PWUD) across seven rural U.S. study sites. Using the social-ecological model (SEM), we examined individual, interpersonal, organizational, community, and policy factors contributing to perceived barriers to SUD treatment. We employed deductive and inductive coding and analytical approaches to identify themes. We also calculated descriptive statistics for participant characteristics and salient themes.
Among 304 participants (55% male, mean age 36 years), we identified barriers to SUD treatment in rural areas across SEM levels. At the individual/interpersonal level, relevant themes included: fear of withdrawal, the need to "get things in order" before entering treatment, close-knit communities and limited confidentiality, networks and settings that perpetuated drug use, and stigma. Organizational-level barriers included: strict facility rules, treatment programs managed like corrections facilities, lack of gender-specific treatment programs, and concerns about jeopardizing employment. Community-level barriers included: limited availability of treatment in local rural communities, long distances and limited transportation, waitlists, and a lack of information about treatment options. Policy-level themes included insurance challenges and system-imposed barriers such as arrest and incarceration.
Our findings highlight multi-level barriers to SUD treatment in rural U.S. communities. Salient barriers included the need to travel long distances to treatment, challenges to confidentiality due to small, close-knit communities where people are highly familiar with one another, and high-threshold treatment program practices. Our findings point to the need to facilitate the elimination of treatment barriers at each level of the SEM in rural America.
2020 年,美国有 280 万人在非大都市地区或“农村”地区需要接受物质使用障碍(SUD)治疗。在这一人群中,只有 10%的人在专业机构接受 SUD 治疗,每 500 人中只有 1 人接受阿片类药物使用障碍(MOUD)的药物治疗。我们探讨了美国农村地区 SUD 治疗面临的障碍的背景。
我们从 2018 年到 2019 年进行了半结构化的深入访谈,以评估美国七个农村研究地点的吸毒者(PWUD)接受 SUD 治疗的障碍。我们使用社会生态学模型(SEM),研究了个人、人际、组织、社区和政策因素对 SUD 治疗感知障碍的影响。我们采用演绎和归纳编码和分析方法来确定主题。我们还计算了参与者特征和突出主题的描述性统计数据。
在 304 名参与者中(55%为男性,平均年龄 36 岁),我们在农村地区的 SEM 各层面都发现了 SUD 治疗的障碍。在个人/人际层面,相关主题包括:对戒断的恐惧、在接受治疗前“整理好一切”的需求、紧密的社区和有限的保密性、使药物使用永久化的网络和环境,以及污名化。组织层面的障碍包括:严格的设施规定、管理方式类似惩教设施的治疗项目、缺乏性别特定的治疗项目,以及担心危及就业。社区层面的障碍包括:当地农村社区治疗的可用性有限、距离远、交通有限、等待名单,以及缺乏关于治疗选择的信息。政策层面的主题包括保险挑战和系统强加的障碍,如逮捕和监禁。
我们的研究结果突出了美国农村社区 SUD 治疗的多层次障碍。突出的障碍包括需要长途跋涉去治疗、由于小而紧密的社区中人们彼此非常熟悉而导致保密性的挑战,以及高门槛的治疗项目实践。我们的研究结果表明,需要在美国农村地区的 SEM 各个层面促进消除治疗障碍。