Kay Emma Sophia, Creasy Stephanie, Townsend Jessica, Hawk Mary
University of Alabama at Birmingham.
University of Pittsburgh.
Res Sq. 2024 Mar 29:rs.3.rs-4172083. doi: 10.21203/rs.3.rs-4172083/v1.
Structural harm reduction is an approach to care for people who use drugs (PWUD) that incorporates services and resources (e.g., naloxone, sterile syringes). As conceptualized in our previous research, harm reduction is also "relational," encompassing a patient-provider relationship that is non-judgmental and respectful of patients' autonomy. Little is known about providers' knowledge or attitudes towards harm reduction beyond structural strategies, whose availability and legality vary across geographical settings. To operationalize how relational harm reduction is both characterized and employed in HIV care settings, where nearly half of patients have a diagnosed substance use disorder, we qualitatively explored providers' knowledge of and use of harm reduction via individual in-depth interviews.
Our study sample included three HIV clinics, one in Birmingham, Alabama (AL) and two in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (PA). We conducted individual interviews with n = 23 providers via Zoom, using a semi-structured interview guide to probe for questions around providers' attitudes towards and experiences with providing care to PWH who use drugs and their knowledge of and attitudes towards relational and structural harm reduction. Data was analyzed in Dedoose using thematic analysis.
Qualitative analyses revealed three primary themes, including . Nearly all providers (n = 19, 83%) described a patient interaction or expressed a sentiment that corresponded with the principles of relational harm reduction. Yet, over half of participants (n = 14, 61%) used language to describe PWH who use drugs that was stigmatizing or described an interaction that was antithetical to the principles of relational harm reduction. Five providers, all from Birmingham, were unaware of the term 'harm reduction.' Few providers had any harm reduction training.
Our findings suggest that relational harm reduction in HIV care settings is practiced along a continuum, and that a range of behaviors exist even within individual providers (e.g., used stigmatizing terms such as "addict" but also described patient interactions that reflected patients' autonomy). Given that harm reduction is typically described as a structural approach, a broader definition of harm reduction that is not dependent on policy-dependent resources is needed.
减少结构性伤害是一种针对吸毒者的护理方法,它整合了各种服务和资源(如纳洛酮、无菌注射器)。正如我们之前研究所概念化的那样,减少伤害也是“关系性的”,包括一种非评判性且尊重患者自主权的医患关系。除了结构性策略之外,对于提供者关于减少伤害的知识或态度知之甚少,而这些策略的可用性和合法性在不同地理环境中各不相同。为了落实关系性减少伤害在艾滋病护理环境中的特征和应用方式,在近一半患者被诊断患有物质使用障碍的艾滋病护理环境中,我们通过个人深度访谈定性地探索了提供者对减少伤害的了解和使用情况。
我们的研究样本包括三家艾滋病诊所,一家在阿拉巴马州伯明翰,两家在宾夕法尼亚州匹兹堡。我们通过Zoom对23名提供者进行了个人访谈,使用半结构化访谈指南来探究围绕提供者对为吸毒的艾滋病患者提供护理的态度和经历以及他们对关系性和结构性减少伤害的了解和态度的问题。使用主题分析法在Dedoose中对数据进行了分析。
定性分析揭示了三个主要主题,包括……几乎所有提供者(19人,83%)都描述了一种患者互动或表达了一种与关系性减少伤害原则相符的情绪。然而,超过一半的参与者(14人,61%)使用了带有污名化的语言来描述吸毒的艾滋病患者,或者描述了一种与关系性减少伤害原则相悖的互动。五名提供者,均来自伯明翰,不知道“减少伤害”这个术语。很少有提供者接受过任何减少伤害方面培训。
我们的研究结果表明,艾滋病护理环境中的关系性减少伤害是在一个连续体上实践的,并且即使在个体提供者内部也存在一系列行为(例如,使用了“瘾君子”等污名化术语,但也描述了反映患者自主权的患者互动)。鉴于减少伤害通常被描述为一种结构性方法,需要一个不依赖于政策相关资源的更广泛的减少伤害定义。