“你必须服用这种药物,但随后你会因为服用它而受到惩罚:”缺乏代理,选择和恐惧药物治疗围产期阿片类药物使用障碍。

IF 3.7 2区 医学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, CLINICAL Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment Pub Date : 2022-08-01 DOI:10.1016/j.jsat.2022.108765
Davida M. Schiff , Erin C. Work , Serra Muftu , Shayla Partridge , Kathryn Dee L. MacMillan , Jessica R. Gray , Bettina B. Hoeppner , John F. Kelly , Shelly F. Greenfield , Hendrée E. Jones , Timothy E. Wilens , Mishka Terplan , Judith Bernstein
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引用次数: 18

摘要

引言:治疗妊娠期和产后阿片类药物使用障碍的药物仍未得到充分利用。需要加强我们对围产期使用和坚持MOUD的可改变因素、促进因素和障碍的理解,以改善孕产妇和儿童的预后。方法:该研究对最近怀孕的阿片类药物使用障碍(OUD)患者进行了半结构化的定性访谈,以探讨作为一名患有OUD的孕妇和/或父母的经历,对治疗利用的促成因素和障碍的看法,维持依从性的激励因素,以及持续支持维持治疗依从性的可接受性。研究小组使用了不断的比较方法来分析转录本并开发代码本。研究小组对转录本进行了双重编码,总体kappa系数为0.88。结果:研究小组在分娩后平均10.1个月采访了26名女性。所有女性都有使用MOUD的经验。四个独特的主题成为围产期药物使用和依从性的障碍:1)由于怀孕或育儿状况影响了治疗依从性,在药物决策方面缺乏代理权和自主权;2) 犹豫使用MOUD以最大限度地降低新生儿戒断的风险;3) 对马萨诸塞州强制儿童保护服务机构报告分娩时接触阿片类药物而导致审查增加和可能失去监护权的担忧;和4)认为治疗环境,特别是美沙酮诊所,没有提供对性别敏感或公平的护理,标准化、不灵活的就诊规定在产后早期尤其难以遵守。结论:患有OUD的妇女在做出围产期治疗决定时经历了双重束缚,描述了分娩后使用MOUD的压力和负面后果。访谈中出现了可能进行干预的关键领域。这些领域包括提高对共同决策的理解,以提高患者的自主权和能动性,特别是在怀孕期间处于康复早期的患者中;围绕围产期MOUD安全性和有效性的持续教育;将MOOD和新生儿戒断症状与强制性儿童保护服务报告脱钩;在药物使用障碍治疗方案中改善对性别问题有敏感认识和公平的护理,包括在产后早期利用家访服务进行剂量评估和管理。
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“You have to take this medication, but then you get punished for taking it:” lack of agency, choice, and fear of medications to treat opioid use disorder across the perinatal period

Introduction

Medications to treat opioid use disorder (MOUD) during pregnancy and in the postpartum period remain underutilized. A need exists to enhance our understanding of modifiable factors, facilitators, and barriers to MOUD utilization and adherence in the perinatal period to improve maternal and child outcomes.

Methods

The study conducted semi-structured qualitative interviews with recently pregnant people with opioid use disorder (OUD) to explore experiences as a pregnant and/or parenting person with OUD, perceptions of enabling factors and barriers to treatment utilization, incentivizing factors for maintaining adherence, and acceptability of ongoing supports to sustain treatment adherence. The study team used constant comparative methods to analyze transcripts and develop the codebook. The team double coded the transcripts, with an overall kappa coefficient of 0.88.

Results

The study team interviewed twenty-six women on average 10.1 months after delivery. All women had some prior experience using MOUD. Four unique themes emerged as barriers to medication utilization and adherence in the perinatal period: 1) Lack of agency and autonomy surrounding medication decisions because pregnancy or parenting status affected treatment adherence; 2) Hesitancy to use MOUD to minimize risk of newborn withdrawal; 3) Concern about increased scrutiny and potential loss of custody due to mandated child protective services reporting for opioid-exposure at delivery in Massachusetts; and 4) Perception that treatment environments, particularly methadone clinics, did not provide gender-responsive or equitable care, and standardized, inflexible visit regulations were particularly difficult to comply with in the early postpartum period.

Conclusions

Women with OUD experienced a double bind when making perinatal treatment decisions, describing pressure to use MOUD with negative consequences after delivery. Key areas for possible intervention emerged from interviews. These areas include improving uptake of shared decision-making to increase patient autonomy and agency, particularly among those in the earliest stages of recovery during pregnancy; ongoing education around perinatal MOUD safety and efficacy; detangling MOUD and neonatal withdrawal signs from mandated child protective services reporting; and improving gender-responsive and equitable care in substance use disorder treatment programs, including incorporating the utilization of home visiting services for dosing assessments and administration in the early postpartum period.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.60
自引率
10.30%
发文量
220
期刊介绍: The Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment (JSAT) features original reviews, training and educational articles, special commentary, and especially research articles that are meaningful to the treatment of alcohol, heroin, marijuana, and other drugs of dependence. JSAT is directed toward treatment practitioners from all disciplines (medicine, nursing, social work, psychology, and counseling) in both private and public sectors, including those involved in schools, health centers, community agencies, correctional facilities, and individual practices. The editors emphasize that JSAT articles should address techniques and treatment approaches that can be used directly by contemporary practitioners.
期刊最新文献
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