了解吸毒和药物依赖--对旨在减少对吸毒者污名化的大众传媒干预措施的范围界定综述。

IF 4.4 2区 医学 Q1 SUBSTANCE ABUSE International Journal of Drug Policy Pub Date : 2024-09-03 DOI:10.1016/j.drugpo.2024.104543
Adam Holland , Tom P Freeman , James Nicholls , Chloe Burke , Joshua Howkins , Magdalena Harris , Matthew Hickman , Angela Attwood , Vicky Carlisle , Peter Krykant , Olivia M Maynard
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:吸毒者面临着根深蒂固的耻辱感,这种耻辱感助长了羞耻感,限制了获得服务的机会,加剧了不平等现象。在反污名化干预措施中使用大众媒体为大规模挑战污名化态度提供了机会。然而,在大众媒体反污名化干预措施中使用的信息传递方法以及作者对 "污名化 "的概念和测量方法并不一致:本范围界定综述对旨在减少对吸毒者的污名化的大众媒体干预措施的开发和/或评估文献进行了梳理。我们系统地搜索了七个数据库中有关以下内容的报告:(i) 吸毒者,(ii) 成见,(iii) 大众媒体。我们绘制了有关干预的数据图表:(i) 对象和接受者,(ii) 形式,(iii) 作者,(iv) 内容,以及 (v) 成见的概念化和测量。我们通过定性内容分析对研究结果进行了叙述性综合:在 14256 条记录中,我们收录了关于 35 项干预措施的 49 份报告。其中 25/35 来自过去五年,19/35 来自美国。目标受众包括公众和/或特定亚人群,通常包括医护人员。大多数干预措施的目的是减少对吸毒模式被认为有问题的人的污名化,而不是对一般吸毒者的污名化。干预措施从单一媒体到复杂的多形式运动不等。吸毒者参与了 22/35 项干预活动。医疗学科的专业人员共同撰写了 29/35 项干预措施。干预内容通常以医学为重点,将药物依赖描述为一种 "疾病 "或医学问题,并强调康复的益处。然而,其他干预措施则对医学框架提出了批评。在一些干预措施中,吸毒和吸毒者被以明显负面的措辞描述。成见 "往往没有被充分理论化,测量方法也不一致,19 项定量评估中使用了 42 种工具来测量与成见相关的现象:我们发现,减少和衡量成见的方法并不一致,这可能反映了制定干预措施的不同动机。许多干预措施的主要动机似乎是促进戒毒服务的参与和康复。
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Making sense of drug use and dependence—A scoping review of mass media interventions intended to reduce stigma towards people who use drugs

Background

People who use drugs face entrenched stigma, which fosters shame, restricts service access, and exacerbates inequalities. The use of mass media in anti-stigma interventions offers an opportunity to challenge stigmatising attitudes at scale. There are, however, inconsistencies in messaging approaches used in mass media anti-stigma interventions, and how authors conceptualise and measure ‘stigma’.

Methods

This scoping review maps literature on the development and/or evaluation of mass media interventions intended to reduce stigma towards people who use drugs. We systematically searched seven databases for reports about: (i) people who use drugs, (ii) stigma, (iii) mass media. We charted data about intervention (i) subjects and recipients, (ii) format, (iii) authors, (iv) content; and (v) conceptualisation and measurement of stigma. We narratively synthesised findings with qualitative content analyses.

Results

From 14,256 records, we included 49 reports about 35 interventions. 25/35 were from the last five years and 19/35 were from the United States. Intended recipients included the public and/or specified sub-populations, often including healthcare workers. Most interventions were intended to reduce stigma towards people with patterns of drug use perceived to be problematic, as opposed to people who use drugs in general. Interventions ranged from single pieces of media to complex multi-format campaigns. People who use(d) drugs contributed to 22/35 interventions. Professionals working in medical disciplines co-authored 29/35 interventions. Intervention content often had a medical focus, describing dependence as a ‘disease’ or medical issue, and emphasised the benefits of recovery. Other interventions, however, criticised medical framings. In some interventions drug use and people who use drugs were described in markedly negative terms. ‘Stigma’ was often under-theorised, and measurement approaches were inconsistent, with 42 instruments used to measure phenomena associated with stigma across 19 quantitative evaluations.

Conclusion

We found inconsistencies in approaches to reduce and measure stigma, potentially reflecting different motivations for intervention development. The primary motivation of many interventions was seemingly to promote drug service engagement and recovery.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.80
自引率
11.40%
发文量
307
审稿时长
62 days
期刊介绍: The International Journal of Drug Policy provides a forum for the dissemination of current research, reviews, debate, and critical analysis on drug use and drug policy in a global context. It seeks to publish material on the social, political, legal, and health contexts of psychoactive substance use, both licit and illicit. The journal is particularly concerned to explore the effects of drug policy and practice on drug-using behaviour and its health and social consequences. It is the policy of the journal to represent a wide range of material on drug-related matters from around the world.
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