Investigating the role of interpersonal relationships on low-income SUD patients’ recovery: a qualitative analysis of various stakeholders in New York state

IF 16.4 1区 化学 Q1 CHEMISTRY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Accounts of Chemical Research Pub Date : 2023-10-08 DOI:10.1080/16066359.2023.2265300
Nusrath Jahan, Neerav Gade, Jenny Zhen-Duan, Marie Fukuda, Rodolfo Estrada, Margarita Alegría
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Participants included individuals with SUD (n = 10), clinicians (n = 12), and policy leaders (n = 13).Results Three themes emerged: 1) Patients’ positive and negative interpersonal relationships with friends and family influenced decisions to seek treatment; 2) strong patient-provider relationships, often defined by the quality of SUD providers and treatment settings, were perceived as crucial for staying in treatment; and 3) justice involvement facilitated treatment access yet deteriorated treatment engagement. Themes emphasized social and structural factors that inhibit patients from fostering support and treatment engagement.Conclusions Our study underscores the importance of interpersonal relationships in SUD treatment-seeking and recovery and the need for positive interactions across the care continuum within broader social networks. Opportunities for positive interpersonal relationships include increasing access to language-concordant treatment; provider training to enhance cultural humility and patient-provider relationships; and mechanisms that improve interpersonal relationships between patients, parole officers, and other justice system members. Accentuating the role of interpersonal relationships and expanding social support interventions can pave the way for structural changes that improve recovery by harnessing different types of social capital.Keywords: Social supportsubstance usedisparitiesrecovery capitalstakeholder engagement Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.Additional informationFundingThis work was supported by the National Institutes of Health/National Institute of Drug Abuse; grant number R01DA044526 (Alegria PI).Notes on contributorsNusrath JahanNusrath Jahan is a medical student at the Tufts University School of Medicine. She is interested in examining disparities across the healthcare continuum and exploring systemic changes to address these inequities. She is committed to increasing healthcare access and improving health equity for marginalized populations.Neerav GadeNeerav Gade is a research associate at Mathematica Policy Research. He is passionate about exploring the intersections between health disparities and individuals’ built and social environments, especially related to housing, food systems, and insurance access. He is interested in evidence- and community-based research and policy levers to promote health equity.Jenny Zhen-DuanJenny Zhen-Duan, PhD is an instructor at Harvard Medical School and a researcher and psychologist at Massachusetts General Hospital. Her current work focuses on examining the biological mechanisms (i.e., epigenetic, neuroendocrine) linking traumatic stressors and substance use among Latinx adolescents.Marie FukudaMarie Fukuda is a project coordinator at the Disparities Research Unit at Massachusetts General Hospital. Her interests range from arts to social justice and open space and community advocacy with a focus on the empowerment of communities through civic engagement.Rodolfo EstradaRodolfo Estrada is a medical student at the Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, interested in systemic approaches to improving health care access and quality for marginalized populations. He is especially interested in patient-centered changes and integrated, longitudinal services.Margarita AlegríaMargarita Alegría, PhD is a professor in the Departments of Medicine and Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and Chief of the Disparities Research Unit at Massachusetts General Hospital. 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Abstract

AbstractBackground While positive impacts of recovery capital and social capital in facilitating substance use disorder (SUD) recovery is increasingly documented, research has shown that low-income and marginalized individuals have lower social capital and may rely on different networks. A more comprehensive approach is needed to understand the social capital of low-income individuals with SUD and how these relationships impact their treatment and recovery.Methods Qualitative data were gathered through semi-structured interviews and analyzed employing thematic analysis. Participants included individuals with SUD (n = 10), clinicians (n = 12), and policy leaders (n = 13).Results Three themes emerged: 1) Patients’ positive and negative interpersonal relationships with friends and family influenced decisions to seek treatment; 2) strong patient-provider relationships, often defined by the quality of SUD providers and treatment settings, were perceived as crucial for staying in treatment; and 3) justice involvement facilitated treatment access yet deteriorated treatment engagement. Themes emphasized social and structural factors that inhibit patients from fostering support and treatment engagement.Conclusions Our study underscores the importance of interpersonal relationships in SUD treatment-seeking and recovery and the need for positive interactions across the care continuum within broader social networks. Opportunities for positive interpersonal relationships include increasing access to language-concordant treatment; provider training to enhance cultural humility and patient-provider relationships; and mechanisms that improve interpersonal relationships between patients, parole officers, and other justice system members. Accentuating the role of interpersonal relationships and expanding social support interventions can pave the way for structural changes that improve recovery by harnessing different types of social capital.Keywords: Social supportsubstance usedisparitiesrecovery capitalstakeholder engagement Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.Additional informationFundingThis work was supported by the National Institutes of Health/National Institute of Drug Abuse; grant number R01DA044526 (Alegria PI).Notes on contributorsNusrath JahanNusrath Jahan is a medical student at the Tufts University School of Medicine. She is interested in examining disparities across the healthcare continuum and exploring systemic changes to address these inequities. She is committed to increasing healthcare access and improving health equity for marginalized populations.Neerav GadeNeerav Gade is a research associate at Mathematica Policy Research. He is passionate about exploring the intersections between health disparities and individuals’ built and social environments, especially related to housing, food systems, and insurance access. He is interested in evidence- and community-based research and policy levers to promote health equity.Jenny Zhen-DuanJenny Zhen-Duan, PhD is an instructor at Harvard Medical School and a researcher and psychologist at Massachusetts General Hospital. Her current work focuses on examining the biological mechanisms (i.e., epigenetic, neuroendocrine) linking traumatic stressors and substance use among Latinx adolescents.Marie FukudaMarie Fukuda is a project coordinator at the Disparities Research Unit at Massachusetts General Hospital. Her interests range from arts to social justice and open space and community advocacy with a focus on the empowerment of communities through civic engagement.Rodolfo EstradaRodolfo Estrada is a medical student at the Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, interested in systemic approaches to improving health care access and quality for marginalized populations. He is especially interested in patient-centered changes and integrated, longitudinal services.Margarita AlegríaMargarita Alegría, PhD is a professor in the Departments of Medicine and Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and Chief of the Disparities Research Unit at Massachusetts General Hospital. Her research focuses on improving health care services for diverse racial/ethnic populations and strategies to integrate community perspectives into health services.
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调查人际关系在低收入SUD患者康复中的作用:纽约州各利益相关者的定性分析
摘要背景虽然康复资本和社会资本在促进物质使用障碍(SUD)康复中的积极作用越来越多地被证明,但研究表明,低收入和边缘化个体的社会资本较低,可能依赖于不同的网络。需要一个更全面的方法来了解患有SUD的低收入个体的社会资本,以及这些关系如何影响他们的治疗和康复。方法采用半结构化访谈法收集定性资料,采用主题分析法进行分析。参与者包括患有SUD的个体(n = 10)、临床医生(n = 12)和政策领导人(n = 13)。结果:(1)患者与朋友和家人的积极和消极人际关系影响患者的就医决定;2)牢固的医患关系,通常由SUD提供者的质量和治疗环境来定义,被认为是保持治疗的关键;3)司法介入促进了治疗可及性,但使治疗参与程度下降。主题强调社会和结构因素抑制患者促进支持和治疗参与。结论:我们的研究强调了人际关系在SUD治疗寻求和康复中的重要性,以及在更广泛的社会网络中整个护理连续体的积极互动的必要性。建立积极人际关系的机会包括增加获得语言和谐治疗的机会;对提供者进行培训,以加强文化谦逊和医患关系;以及改善病人、假释官和其他司法系统成员之间人际关系的机制。强调人际关系的作用和扩大社会支持干预措施可以为结构性变革铺平道路,通过利用不同类型的社会资本来促进恢复。关键词:社会支持物质使用差异恢复资本利益相关者参与披露声明作者未报告潜在的利益冲突。这项工作得到了美国国立卫生研究院/国家药物滥用研究所的支持;授权号R01DA044526 (Alegria PI)。作者简介:usrath Jahan是塔夫茨大学医学院的一名医学生。她有兴趣研究医疗保健连续体的差异,并探索解决这些不平等的系统性变化。她致力于增加边缘化人群获得医疗保健的机会和改善卫生公平。Neerav Gade是Mathematica政策研究中心的研究员。他热衷于探索健康差异与个人建筑和社会环境之间的交叉点,特别是与住房,食品系统和保险相关的交叉点。他对以证据和社区为基础的研究以及促进卫生公平的政策杠杆感兴趣。Jenny Zhen-Duan,博士,哈佛医学院讲师,麻省总医院研究员和心理学家。她目前的工作重点是研究拉丁裔青少年创伤性应激源和物质使用之间的生物学机制(即表观遗传、神经内分泌)。玛丽·福田(Marie Fukuda)是马萨诸塞州总医院差异研究部门的项目协调员。她的兴趣范围从艺术到社会正义、开放空间和社区倡导,重点是通过公民参与赋予社区权力。鲁道夫·埃斯特拉达是布朗大学沃伦·阿尔珀特医学院的一名医学生,对改善边缘化人群医疗服务的可及性和质量的系统方法感兴趣。他对以病人为中心的改变和综合的纵向服务特别感兴趣。玛格丽塔AlegríaMargarita Alegría,博士,哈佛医学院医学和精神病学教授,麻省总医院差异研究中心主任。她的研究重点是改善不同种族/民族人口的卫生保健服务,以及将社区观点纳入卫生服务的战略。
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来源期刊
Accounts of Chemical Research
Accounts of Chemical Research 化学-化学综合
CiteScore
31.40
自引率
1.10%
发文量
312
审稿时长
2 months
期刊介绍: Accounts of Chemical Research presents short, concise and critical articles offering easy-to-read overviews of basic research and applications in all areas of chemistry and biochemistry. These short reviews focus on research from the author’s own laboratory and are designed to teach the reader about a research project. In addition, Accounts of Chemical Research publishes commentaries that give an informed opinion on a current research problem. Special Issues online are devoted to a single topic of unusual activity and significance. Accounts of Chemical Research replaces the traditional article abstract with an article "Conspectus." These entries synopsize the research affording the reader a closer look at the content and significance of an article. Through this provision of a more detailed description of the article contents, the Conspectus enhances the article's discoverability by search engines and the exposure for the research.
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