阿片类镇痛药使用障碍的认知:一项混合方法研究。

IF 1.1 Q4 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES Palliative medicine reports Pub Date : 2023-08-30 eCollection Date: 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1089/pmr.2023.0021
Atsede Aregay, Margaret O'Connor, Jill Stow, Nicola Ayers, Susan Lee
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引用次数: 1

摘要

背景:阿片类药物的供应和可及性是一个全球性问题。在资源匮乏的环境中,如埃塞俄比亚,获得阿片类药物的机会要么有限,要么根本不存在,而且在医疗保健环境中受到法律限制。这项研究旨在确定埃塞俄比亚农村和地区卫生保健环境中阿片类药物供应和可及性的障碍。方法:采用混合方法案例研究设计。共有220名来自初级、中级和三级医疗机构的护士受邀参加了一项知识和实践调查。在定性访谈中,38名参与者来自一个地区的教育机构、卫生服务机构和社区。结果:阿片类止痛药的供应和可及性障碍表现为疼痛,疼痛被认为是虚弱、缺乏知识、对开具吗啡处方的副作用担忧、只有医生被授权开具吗啡处方、缺乏进口吗啡成分的外汇、医院获得吗啡的不公平,而农村医疗机构没有。结论:这项研究的结果表明,阿片类药物,特别是吗啡,并不是所有需要的患者都能持续获得。卫生专业人员缺乏有关阿片类药物的知识。加强现有的无痛倡议,改善吗啡的类型、剂量和供应,有助于减少不必要的痛苦,并增加有需要的人获得基本止痛药的机会。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Perceptions of Barriers to Using Opioid Analgesics: A Mixed Methods Study.

Background: Availability and accessibility of opioids are a worldwide problem. In low-resource settings, such as Ethiopia, access to opioids is either limited or nonexistent and legally restricted in health care settings. This study aimed to identify barriers for the availability and accessibility of opioids in Ethiopian rural and regional health care settings.

Methods: A mixed-method case study design was used. A total of 220 nurses from primary, secondary, and tertiary health care settings were invited to participate in a survey of knowledge and practice. For the qualitative interview, 38 participants were recruited from educational facilities, health services, and the community across a region.

Results: Barriers in availability and accessibility of opioid analgesics were expressing pain considered as a sign of weakness, lack of knowledge, side effect concerns about prescribing morphine, only doctors being authorized to prescribe morphine, lack of foreign currency to import morphine ingredients, and inequity in accessing morphine in hospitals and none in rural health care settings.

Conclusion: The findings of this study indicate that opioids, particularly morphine, were not consistently available and accessible to all patients in need. Health professionals lacked knowledge about opioids. Strengthening the existing pain-free initiatives and improving the type, dose, and supply of morphine could help reduce needless suffering and enhance access to essential pain medicines for those in need.

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