提供者对女性退伍军人披露饮酒情况的障碍和促进因素的看法

Traci H. Abraham, E. Lewis, K. Drummond, C. Timko, Michael A. Cucciare
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引用次数: 12

摘要

目的更好地了解阻碍或帮助女性退伍军人与初级保健提供者讨论其饮酒情况的障碍和促进因素,以便更好地确定问题饮酒并加强提供者与患者关于有害饮酒的沟通。背景:接受初级保健治疗的女性可能比男性更不可能透露潜在有害的酒精使用情况。没有研究定性地考察了初级保健提供者关于影响女性退伍军人在常规诊所就诊时准确披露饮酒情况的因素的观点。方法从美国加利福尼亚州两家退伍军人管理局妇女健康诊所的初级保健部门招募服务人员(n=14)。从实施科学综合框架的领域发展了一份开放式访谈指南。访谈引出了初级保健提供者对女性退伍军人(她们可能或可能没有以有害的方式使用酒精)在常规诊所就诊期间披露酒精使用情况的障碍和促进因素的看法。采用模板分析和矩阵分析相结合的方法对访谈数据进行演绎分析。参与者报告了他们认为影响女退伍军人在筛查期间准确披露酒精使用情况的决定以及与初级保健提供者讨论有害饮酒的开放程度的六个障碍和五个促进因素。最常见的披露障碍是耻辱、羞耻和不适,以及共同出现的心理健康问题,而建立牢固的治疗关系和使用探针“深入挖掘”最常被描述为促进因素。这项研究的发现可能会加强医患之间关于酒精使用的讨论,并帮助初级保健提供者更好地识别女性退伍军人的饮酒问题,最终改善患者的治疗效果。
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Providers’ perceptions of barriers and facilitators to disclosure of alcohol use by women veterans
Aim To better understand barriers and facilitators that hinder or help women veterans discuss their alcohol use with providers in primary care in order to better identify problematic drinking and enhance provider–patient communication about harmful drinking. Background Women presenting to primary care may be less likely than men to disclose potentially harmful alcohol use. No studies have qualitatively examined the perspectives of primary care providers about factors that affect accurate disclosure of alcohol use by women veterans during routine clinic visits. Methods Providers (n=14) were recruited from primary care at two veterans Administration Women’s Health Clinics in California, United States. An open-ended interview guide was developed from domains of the consolidated framework for implementation science. Interviews elicited primary care providers’ perspectives on barriers and facilitators to women veterans’ (who may or may not be using alcohol in harmful ways) disclosure of alcohol use during routine clinic visits. Interview data were analyzed deductively using a combination of template analysis and matrix analysis. Findings Participants reported six barriers and five facilitators that they perceived affect women veteran’s decision to accurately disclose alcohol use during screenings and openness to discussing harmful drinking with a primary care provider. The most commonly described barriers to disclosure were stigma, shame, and discomfort, and co-occuring mental health concerns, while building strong therapeutic relationships and using probes to ‘dig deeper’ were most often described as facilitators. Findings from this study may enhance provider–patient discussions about alcohol use and help primary care providers to better identify problematic drinking among women veterans, ultimately improving patient outcomes.
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