Experiences of and recommendations for LGBTQ+-affirming substance use services: an exploratory qualitative descriptive study with LGBTQ+ people who use opioids and other drugs.

IF 3 3区 医学 Q2 SUBSTANCE ABUSE Substance Abuse Treatment, Prevention, and Policy Pub Date : 2024-01-03 DOI:10.1186/s13011-023-00581-8
Margaret M Paschen-Wolff, Avery DeSousa, Emily Allen Paine, Tonda L Hughes, Aimee N C Campbell
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Abstract

Background: Lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, and other LGBTQ populations (LGBTQ+; e.g., asexual individuals) have higher rates of substance use (SU) and disorders (SUD) compared to heterosexual and cisgender populations. Such disparities can be attributed to minority stress, including stigma and discrimination in healthcare settings. LGBTQ+-affirming SU treatment and related services remain limited. The purpose of this exploratory qualitative descriptive study was to characterize LGBTQ+ people's experiences in SU services and recommendations for LGBTQ+- affirming care.

Methods: We conducted demographic surveys (characterized using descriptive statistics) and individual qualitative interviews with N = 23 LGBTQ+ people. We employed flexible coding and a thematic analysis approach to describe participants' experiences with stigma, discrimination, and support within SU services at the patient-, staff-, and organizational-level; and participant recommendations for how to make such services LGBTQ+-affirming. We highlighted components of minority stress and mitigators of adverse stress responses throughout our thematic analysis.

Results: Patient-level experiences included bullying, name-calling, sexual harassment, and physical distancing from peers; and support via community-building with LGBTQ+ peers. Staff-level experiences included name-calling, denial of services, misgendering, lack of intervention in peer bullying, and assumptions about participants' sexuality; and support via staff advocacy for LGBTQ+ patients, holistic treatment models, and openly LGBTQ+ staff. Organizational-level experiences included stigma in binary gendered program structures; and support from programs with gender-affirming groups and housing, and in visual cues (e.g., rainbow flags) of affirming care. Stigma and discrimination led to minority stress processes like identity concealment and stress coping responses like SU relapse; support facilitated SU treatment engagement and retention. Recommendations for LGBTQ+-affirming care included non-discrimination policies, LGBTQ+-specific programming, hiring LGBTQ+ staff, routine staff sensitivity training, and gender-inclusive program structures.

Conclusions: LGBTQ+ people experience stigma and discrimination within SU services; supportive and affirming care is vital to reducing treatment barriers and promoting positive health outcomes. The current study offers concrete recommendations for how to deliver LGBTQ+-affirming care, which could reduce SU disparities and drug overdose mortality overall.

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LGBTQ+ 支持药物使用服务的经验和建议:对使用阿片类药物和其他药物的 LGBTQ+ 人士的探索性定性描述研究。
背景:与异性恋和双性恋人群相比,女同性恋、男同性恋、双性恋、变性人、同性恋者和其他 LGBTQ人群(LGBTQ+;如无性恋者)的药物使用率(SU)和失调率(SUD)较高。这种差异可归因于少数群体的压力,包括医疗环境中的污名化和歧视。支持 LGBTQ+ 的 SU 治疗和相关服务仍然有限。这项探索性定性描述研究旨在描述 LGBTQ+ 在 SU 服务中的经历,并就 LGBTQ+ 平权护理提出建议:我们对 N = 23 名 LGBTQ+ 进行了人口调查(使用描述性统计)和个人定性访谈。我们采用了灵活的编码和主题分析方法,从患者、员工和组织层面描述了参与者在 SU 服务中的羞辱、歧视和支持经历,以及参与者对如何使此类服务具有 LGBTQ+ 支持性的建议。在整个专题分析过程中,我们强调了少数群体压力的组成部分和不良压力反应的缓解因素:患者层面的经历包括欺凌、辱骂、性骚扰和与同伴的身体疏远;以及通过与 LGBTQ+ 同伴建立社区而获得的支持。员工层面的经历包括辱骂、拒绝提供服务、误用性别、对同伴欺凌缺乏干预、对参与者性取向的假设;以及通过员工对 LGBTQ+ 患者的宣传、整体治疗模式和公开的 LGBTQ+ 员工提供的支持。组织层面的经验包括:二元性别项目结构中的污名化;来自项目的支持,包括性别平权小组和住房,以及平权护理的视觉提示(如彩虹旗)。污名化和歧视导致了少数群体的压力过程,如身份隐藏和压力应对反应,如 SU 复发;支持则促进了 SU 治疗的参与和保持。对 LGBTQ+ 认可护理的建议包括非歧视政策、LGBTQ+ 专项计划、聘用 LGBTQ+ 员工、员工日常敏感性培训以及性别包容性计划结构:结论:LGBTQ+人群在 SU 服务中会受到羞辱和歧视;支持性和肯定性护理对于减少治疗障碍和促进积极的健康结果至关重要。当前的研究为如何提供 LGBTQ+ 平权护理提供了具体建议,这可以从整体上减少 SU 的差异和药物过量死亡率。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
73
审稿时长
19 weeks
期刊介绍: Substance Abuse Treatment, Prevention, and Policy is an open access, peer-reviewed journal that encompasses research concerning substance abuse, with a focus on policy issues. The journal aims to provide an environment for the exchange of ideas, new research, consensus papers, and critical reviews, to bridge the established fields that share a mutual goal of reducing the harms from substance use. These fields include: legislation pertaining to substance use; correctional supervision of people with substance use disorder; medical treatment and screening; mental health services; research; and evaluation of substance use disorder programs.
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