Drug and Alcohol Dependence Reports (Sep 2024)

Perceptions of structural and provider-based substance use stigma interventions among primary care professionals

  • Erin Fanning Madden,
  • Felicia Frabis,
  • Jonathan Cohn,
  • Fares Qeadan,
  • Christopher RC Mann,
  • Mark K. Greenwald

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12
p. 100259

Abstract

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Background: Stigma enacted in primary care settings remains a barrier to care for people who use drugs (PWUD). Little is known about the acceptability of potential stigma interventions to target structural drivers of stigma affecting the organizational- or provider-level. Methods: In-depth interview data were collected from 21 individuals working in Michigan primary care facilities. Participants included clinical (e.g., physicians, nurses) and non-clinical (e.g., administrators, receptionists) staff. Interviews explored perceptions of stigma toward PWUD and the acceptability of interventions to mitigate such stigma. Thematic analysis was used to identify stigma themes. Results: Participants largely reported substance-use stigma as a matter of individual attitudes or knowledge limitations and described such stigma as rarely occurring during interpersonal interactions. Participants were still acutely aware of upstream societal and organizational factors creating structural barriers to care and/or worsening outcomes among PWUD, but seldom labeled these as stigma. Some provider and structural stigma reduction interventions were enthusiastically supported because they address participant ideas of substance-use stigma drivers (e.g., lack of knowledge) or provide resources that could improve care quality or provide resources for PWUD. Conversely, participants opposed some potential stigma interventions, e.g., less-frequent urine drug testing and increasing clinical visit time, deemed infeasible because of outside forces like insurers or regulators. Conclusions: Although most participants conceptualized substance-use stigma as an individual or interpersonal process best addressed with training, their awareness of social determinants of health seemed to fuel an openness to some structural interventions to reduce organizational and provider stigma toward PWUD in primary care settings.

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