Department of Sociology and Social Policy, Lingnan University, Hong Kong, Hong Kong SAR, China.
Department of Social Work and Sociology, University of Zambia, Lusaka, Zambia.
Front Public Health. 2024 Mar 8;12:1250608. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2024.1250608. eCollection 2024.
Scholars worldwide have defined the COVID-19 pandemic as a mass-disabling event of our time. The situation is grave for families experiencing financial hurdles while caring for young adults in recovery from addiction problems.
Using semi-structured interviews with 30 purposively selected family caregivers (FCGs) of young adults with substance use disorders (SUDs) in Lusaka, Zambia, this study reveals several factors influencing forgone healthcare for this medically vulnerable group.
Financial challenges and huge out-of-pocket bills; caregivers' perceived far-fetched recovery of the young adult; the cost of medication and transportation; the young adult's little perceived need for healthcare service use, their runaway and treatment elusive tendencies; caregiver concerns about contracting the virus, and the stigma associated with it; and a fragmented child and adolescent mental health system influenced forgone healthcare. The young adults were often unavailable for days and months, posing challenges to the continuity of care. Despite caregivers' acknowledgment of the availability of healthcare professionals, young adults with problematic substance use had limited access to SUD recovery services, resulting in adverse health outcomes. Results also show that most family caregivers encountered challenges in accessing and purchasing psychotropic medications, which were difficult to find during the lockdowns. Some family caregivers lost their sources of income by being laid off from work due to the pandemic and skipping work to attend to caregiving responsibilities. Most of those in self-employment had to close their business and stay home to look after their youth. Several caregivers kept their youth at home because they failed to access private residential SUD recovery services. Family caregivers mostly relied on outpatient public health services, alternative medicine from traditional healers, and faith-based healing, all of which some young adults rarely accessed because of their problematic behaviors of escaping healthcare.
These identifiable risk factors, and their detrimental consequences highlight the need for interventions to improve healthcare access for this vulnerable population. Supporting FCGs of addicted young adults is crucial in ensuring the well-being of both the caregivers and care recipients. Further research is warranted to explore potential solutions, such as peer support programs, policy changes, and education initiatives for carers and recipients in the (post) pandemic era.
世界各地的学者将 COVID-19 大流行定义为我们这个时代的一场大规模致残事件。对于那些在经济困难中照顾患有药物使用障碍的年轻人的家庭来说,情况非常严峻。
本研究采用半结构化访谈的方式,对赞比亚卢萨卡的 30 名有药物使用障碍的年轻人的家庭照顾者(FCG)进行了研究,揭示了影响这群医疗脆弱群体获得医疗保健的几个因素。
经济挑战和巨额自付费用;照顾者对年轻人康复的看法不切实际;药物和交通费用;年轻人对医疗服务使用的需求感知较小、离家出走和治疗难以捉摸的倾向;照顾者对感染病毒的担忧以及相关的耻辱感;以及支离破碎的儿童和青少年心理健康系统影响了医疗保健的获得。年轻人经常几天甚至几个月都无法联系,这给护理的连续性带来了挑战。尽管照顾者承认有医疗保健专业人员的存在,但患有药物使用障碍的年轻人获得康复服务的机会有限,导致不良的健康结果。研究结果还表明,大多数家庭照顾者在获得和购买精神药物方面遇到了挑战,而这些药物在封锁期间很难找到。由于大流行,一些家庭照顾者因被裁员而失去了收入来源,不得不旷工照顾照顾者的责任。大多数自雇者不得不关闭他们的企业,呆在家里照顾他们的年轻人。一些照顾者让他们的年轻人呆在家里,因为他们无法获得私人住宅药物使用障碍康复服务。家庭照顾者主要依赖于门诊公共卫生服务、传统治疗师的替代药物和基于信仰的治疗,而一些年轻人很少接受这些治疗,因为他们逃避医疗的行为问题。
这些可识别的风险因素及其带来的不利后果突出表明,需要采取干预措施,改善弱势群体获得医疗保健的机会。支持患有药物成瘾的年轻成年人的家庭照顾者对于确保照顾者和被照顾者的福祉至关重要。在后疫情时代,有必要进一步研究探索为照顾者和接受者提供同伴支持计划、政策变革和教育计划等潜在解决方案。