Ellefsen Rune, De Pirro Silvana, Haukland Vegard, Wüsthoff Linda Elise Couëssurel, Arnevik Espen Ajo
Unit for Clinical Research on Addictions, Oslo University Hospital Health Trust, PB 4959 Nydalen, Oslo, 0424, Norway.
Department of Addiction Medicine, Haukeland University Hospital, Østre Murallmenningen 7, Bergen, 5012, Norway.
Harm Reduct J. 2024 Dec 31;21(1):230. doi: 10.1186/s12954-024-01135-2.
Little attention has been paid to the experiences of clinicians and health personnel who provide heroin-assisted treatment (HAT). This study provides the first empirical findings about the clinicians' experiences of providing HAT in the Norwegian context.
23 qualitative interviews were conducted with 31 clinicians shortly after HAT clinics opened in Norway's two largest cities: Oslo and Bergen. By inductive thematic analysis of interview transcripts, we identified what research participants experienced and viewed as the chief rewards and challenges of providing HAT. The study aimed to offer an overview of these key rewards and challenges, with insights potentially transferable to HAT programs internationally.
Participants experienced three aspects of providing HAT as particularly rewarding, and three as most challenging. The rewarding aspects were observing harm reduction outcomes; providing holistic care; and having a positive clinic milieu and patient-clinician relationships. The challenging aspects were dosing and overdose risk; rule enforcement and aggression management; and the difficulty of initiating treatments beyond medication and harm reduction. The rewarding and challenging aspects of providing HAT overlapped and were at times contradictory, thus reflecting the duality and tensions in clinicians' work to provide HAT. The challenges were reported to vary between patient subgroups, according to their degree of instability. The most unstable patients were seen as involving more difficulties as regards the challenging aspects of HAT. Participants expressed uncertainty about HAT's utility for a small group of the most unstable patients.
While studies about clinical experiences of HAT have usually examined individual or limited aspects of treatment provision, this study provided an overview of the main aspects of the rewards and challenges of providing HAT. Importantly, it also showed the tensions between these overlapping and sometimes contradictory aspects of HAT provision. Because a positive patient-clinician relationship is crucial to patient satisfaction and treatment outcomes in HAT, the provision of training for clinicians on navigating the inherent tensions of HAT provision, nurturing therapeutic alliances with patients, and managing their role as gatekeepers to medical heroin and valuable services, seem particularly important for ensuring that care is patient-centered and staff are adequately supported.
提供海洛因辅助治疗(HAT)的临床医生和卫生人员的经历很少受到关注。本研究首次提供了关于挪威临床医生提供HAT经历的实证研究结果。
在挪威最大的两个城市奥斯陆和卑尔根开设HAT诊所后不久,对31名临床医生进行了23次定性访谈。通过对访谈记录进行归纳主题分析,我们确定了研究参与者在提供HAT过程中所经历的以及视为主要回报和挑战的事情。该研究旨在概述这些关键回报和挑战,并提供可能适用于国际HAT项目的见解。
参与者认为提供HAT有三个方面特别有意义,三个方面最具挑战性。有意义的方面包括观察到减少伤害的结果;提供全面护理;拥有积极的诊所环境和医患关系。具有挑战性的方面包括剂量和过量风险;规则执行和攻击管理;以及启动药物治疗和减少伤害之外的治疗的困难。提供HAT的有意义和具有挑战性的方面相互重叠,有时相互矛盾,从而反映了临床医生在提供HAT工作中的二元性和紧张关系。据报告,根据患者亚组的不稳定程度,挑战在不同患者亚组中有所不同。最不稳定的患者在HAT具有挑战性的方面被认为涉及更多困难。参与者对HAT对一小部分最不稳定患者的效用表示不确定。
虽然关于HAT临床经验的研究通常只考察治疗提供的个别或有限方面,但本研究概述了提供HAT的回报和挑战的主要方面。重要的是,它还显示了HAT提供的这些重叠且有时相互矛盾的方面之间的紧张关系。由于积极的医患关系对于HAT中的患者满意度和治疗结果至关重要,因此为临床医生提供培训,以应对HAT提供中固有的紧张关系、培养与患者的治疗联盟以及管理他们作为医用海洛因和宝贵服务守门人的角色,对于确保以患者为中心的护理和为工作人员提供充分支持似乎尤为重要。