接受阿片类药物使用障碍药物治疗时与怀孕和养育子女有关的障碍:对接受治疗的妇女、终止治疗的妇女以及为她们提供服务的专业人员进行的多小组定性研究。

Hannah B Apsley, Kristina Brant, Sarah Brothers, Eric Harrison, Emma Skogseth, Robert P Schwartz, Abenaa A Jones
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:女性在寻求药物使用障碍治疗时面临着独特的障碍:女性在寻求药物使用障碍治疗时面临着独特的障碍,这些障碍通常与怀孕和养育子女有关:本研究通过阐明妇女在开始或继续接受阿片类药物使用障碍药物治疗时所面临的与怀孕和养育子女有关的障碍,对现有文献进行了补充:本研究以半结构化定性访谈为基础:三个分组参加了有关其经历的半结构式访谈(N = 42):曾经或正在使用药物治疗阿片类药物使用障碍的当前或过去患有阿片类药物使用障碍的女性、药物使用障碍治疗项目的专业人员以及刑事司法专业人员:确定了三个与养育子女相关的次主题:(1)没有足够的托儿服务来安排约会和会议,(2)担心失去对子女的监护权或接触子女的机会,以及(3)优先考虑子女的需求,然后才是自己的需求。在怀孕这一障碍方面,发现了三个次主题:(1)医生在为怀孕患者开阿片类药物使用障碍处方时犹豫不决,(2)农村地区获得资源的途径有限,以及(3)难以驾驭复杂、分散的医疗系统:结论:需要进行系统性改革,以减少孕妇和养育子女的妇女在寻求阿片类药物使用障碍药物治疗时遇到的障碍。其中包括改善住院和门诊治疗项目的托儿支持,这将缓解妇女在托儿方面的障碍,以及她们担心因治疗而离开孩子后无法接触孩子的担忧。另一项可减少这些妇女面临的障碍的系统性改进措施是,为她们提供全面、综合的产前护理、产后护理、儿科就诊以及适当的药物使用障碍治疗。
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Pregnancy- and parenting-related barriers to receiving medication for opioid use disorder: A multi-paneled qualitative study of women in treatment, women who terminated treatment, and the professionals who serve them.

Background: Women face unique barriers when seeking treatment for substance use disorders, often related to pregnancy and parenting.

Objectives: This study adds to the extant literature by elucidating the pregnancy- and parenting-related barriers women face when initiating or continuing medication for opioid use disorder, specifically.

Design: This study is based on qualitative semi-structured interviews.

Methods: Three subgroups participated in semi-structured interviews regarding their experiences (N = 42): women with current or past opioid use disorders who have used or were presently using medication for opioid use disorder, professionals working in substance use disorder treatment programs, and criminal justice professionals.

Results: Three parenting-related subthemes were identified: (1) insufficient access to childcare to navigate appointments and meetings, (2) fear of losing custody of, or access to, one's children, and (3) prioritizing one's children's needs before one's own. Three subthemes were identified with regard to pregnancy as a barrier: (1) hesitancy among physicians to prescribe medication for opioid use disorder for pregnant patients, (2) limited access to resources in rural areas, and (3) difficulty navigating a complex, decentralized health system.

Conclusion: Systemic changes are needed to reduce pregnant and parenting women's barriers to seeking medication for opioid use disorder. These include improved childcare support at both in-patient and outpatient treatment programs, which would assuage women's barriers related to childcare, as well as their fears of losing access to their children if they spend time away from their children for treatment. An additional systemic improvement that may reduce barriers for these women is access to comprehensive, integrated care for their prenatal care, postpartum care, pediatric appointments, and appropriate substance use disorder treatment.

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