Human Development, Washington State University Vancouver, Vancouver, WA, United States.
Department of Community and Behavioral Health, Elson S. Floyd College of Medicine, Washington State University Spokane, Spokane, WA, United States.
Front Public Health. 2024 Jun 5;12:1356033. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2024.1356033. eCollection 2024.
American Indian/Alaska Native (AI/AN) communities are more likely to suffer negative consequences related to substance misuse. The COVID-19 pandemic exacerbated the opioid poisoning crisis, in combination with ongoing treatment barriers resulting from settler-colonialism, systemic oppression and racial discrimination. AI/AN adults are at greatest risk of COVID-19 related serious illness and death. In collaboration with an Indigenous community advisory board and Tribal leadership, this study explored AI/AN treatment provider perceptions of client-relatives' (i.e., SUD treatment recipients) experiences during the pandemic from 2020 to 2022.
Providers who underwent screening and were eligible to participate ( = 25) represented 6 programs and organizations serving rural and urban areas in Washington, Utah, and Minnesota. Participants engaged in audio-recorded 60-90 min semi-structured individual interviews conducted virtually via Zoom. The interview guide included 15 questions covering regulatory changes, guidance for telemedicine, policy and procedures, staff communication, and client-relatives' reactions to implemented changes, service utilization, changes in treatment modality, and perceptions of impact on their roles and practice. Interview recordings were transcribed and de-identified. Members of the research team independently reviewed transcripts before reaching consensus. Coding was completed in Dedoose, followed by analyses informed by a qualitative descriptive approach.
Five main domains were identified related to client-relative experiences during the COVID-19 pandemic, as observed by providers: (1) accessibility, (2) co-occurring mental health, (3) social determinants of health, (4) substance use, coping, and harm reduction strategies, and (5) community strengths. Providers reported the distinctive experiences of AI/AN communities, highlighting the impact on client-relatives, who faced challenges such as reduced income, heightened grief and loss, and elevated rates of substance use and opioid-related poisonings. Community and culturally informed programming promoting resilience and healing are outlined.
Findings underscore the impact on SUD among AI/AN communities during the COVID-19 pandemic. Identifying treatment barriers and mental health impacts on client-relatives during a global pandemic can inform ongoing and future culturally responsive SUD prevention and treatment strategies. Elevating collective voice to strengthen Indigenous informed systems of care to address the gap in culturally-and community-based services, can bolster holistic approaches and long-term service needs to promote SUD prevention efforts beyond emergency response efforts.
美洲印第安人/阿拉斯加原住民(AI/AN)社区更有可能因药物滥用而遭受负面后果。COVID-19 大流行加剧了阿片类药物中毒危机,再加上因殖民主义、系统性压迫和种族歧视而导致的持续治疗障碍。AI/AN 成年人面临与 COVID-19 相关的严重疾病和死亡的最大风险。在与一个土著社区咨询委员会和部落领导层合作的基础上,本研究从 2020 年到 2022 年,探讨了 AI/AN 治疗提供者对客户亲属(即药物滥用治疗接受者)在大流行期间经历的看法。
经过筛选并符合条件的参与者(n=25)代表了在华盛顿、犹他州和明尼苏达州的 6 个服务于农村和城市地区的项目和组织。参与者通过虚拟的 Zoom 进行了录音时长为 60-90 分钟的半结构化个人访谈。访谈指南包括 15 个问题,涵盖监管变化、远程医疗指南、政策和程序、员工沟通以及客户亲属对实施变化的反应、服务利用、治疗模式变化,以及对其角色和实践的影响的看法。访谈记录被转录并去识别。研究团队的成员在达成共识之前,独立审查了记录。在 Dedoose 中完成编码,然后根据定性描述方法进行分析。
研究人员确定了与 COVID-19 大流行期间客户亲属经历相关的五个主要领域,这是提供者观察到的:(1)可及性,(2)并发心理健康,(3)健康的社会决定因素,(4)物质使用、应对和减少伤害策略,以及(5)社区优势。提供者报告了 AI/AN 社区的独特经历,强调了对客户亲属的影响,他们面临着收入减少、悲痛和失落加剧以及物质使用和阿片类药物中毒率上升等挑战。还概述了促进恢复力和治疗的社区和文化知情计划。
研究结果强调了 COVID-19 大流行对 AI/AN 社区药物滥用的影响。确定大流行期间治疗障碍和对客户亲属的心理健康影响,可以为正在进行的和未来的基于文化的药物滥用预防和治疗策略提供信息。提高集体声音以加强以土著为中心的护理系统,以解决基于文化和社区的服务差距,可以增强整体方法和长期服务需求,以促进药物滥用预防工作,而不仅仅是紧急应对努力。