Department of Psychological Sciences, University of Missouri-St. Louis, St. Louis, MO, United States.
Department of Psychological Sciences, University of Missouri-St. Louis, St. Louis, MO, United States; Missouri Institute of Mental Health, University of Missouri-St. Louis, St. Louis, MO, United States.
Int J Drug Policy. 2024 Nov;133:104612. doi: 10.1016/j.drugpo.2024.104612. Epub 2024 Oct 5.
Substance use stigma poses a barrier to treatment and recovery from substance use disorder. Stigma is amplified when intersecting with other stigmatized identities, particularly Black racial identity. Despite increasing attention to the intersecting roles of racial and substance use stigma, it is unknown how these stigmas interact to impact treatment and health outcomes among Black people who use drugs. This scoping review examines empirical research documenting differential impacts of race and racism on substance use stigma.
We systematically searched PsychInfo and PubMed databases. Eligible studies were conducted in the U.S.; examined a Black sample, subsample, or experimental condition/variable (i.e., in a vignette); and measured substance use stigma (excluding alcohol or nicotine). Qualitative studies describing a theme related to substance use stigma were also included.
Of 1431 unique results, 22 articles met inclusion criteria. The most measured substance use stigma type was interpersonal (e.g., discrimination). Most quantitative findings (n = 15) suggested that Black members of the general public endorse less substance use stigma and Black people who use drugs face less substance use stigma relative to their White counterparts. Qualitative studies (n = 7) suggested stigma was a more common and pernicious substance use treatment barrier for Black people compared to White. Across methods, racial prejudice was associated with substance use stigma, supporting hegemonic ideas that substance use is stereotypically characteristic of Black people.
The interaction between substance use stigma and race is complex and varies by in-group and out-group raters as a function of racial identity and identity as a person who uses drugs. Contradictory findings reflect methodological differences, emphasizing the need for more unified measurement of substance use stigma. More research is needed among Black people who use drugs to improve understanding of the impact of these intersecting stigmas on racial inequities in substance use treatment, morbidity, and mortality.
物质使用污名是治疗和康复物质使用障碍的障碍。当与其他受污名化的身份(尤其是黑人种族身份)相交时,污名会加剧。尽管越来越关注种族和物质使用污名的交叉作用,但尚不清楚这些污名如何相互作用,从而影响使用毒品的黑人的治疗和健康结果。本范围综述检查了记录种族和种族主义对物质使用污名的差异影响的实证研究。
我们系统地搜索了 PsychInfo 和 PubMed 数据库。符合条件的研究在美国进行;检查了黑人样本、子样本或实验条件/变量(即,在情景剧中);并测量了物质使用污名(不包括酒精或尼古丁)。还包括描述与物质使用污名相关主题的定性研究。
在 1431 个独特的结果中,有 22 篇文章符合纳入标准。最测量的物质使用污名类型是人际(例如歧视)。大多数定量发现(n = 15)表明,普通公众中的黑人成员对物质使用污名的认可度较低,与白人相比,使用毒品的黑人面临的物质使用污名较少。定性研究(n = 7)表明,与白人相比,污名是黑人使用毒品者接受治疗的一个更常见且更有害的障碍。跨方法,种族偏见与物质使用污名相关,支持了物质使用刻板印象是黑人的典型特征的霸权观念。
物质使用污名与种族之间的相互作用是复杂的,并且根据种族身份和作为使用毒品的人的身份,因内群体和外群体评价者而异。相互矛盾的发现反映了方法上的差异,强调需要更统一地测量物质使用污名。需要在使用毒品的黑人中进行更多的研究,以更好地了解这些交叉污名对物质使用治疗、发病率和死亡率方面的种族不平等的影响。