SSM: Qualitative Research in Health (Dec 2021)

A qualitative examination of substance use disorder treatment-seeking among women with opioid use disorders: The role of syndemics and structural violence

  • Antoinette L. Spector,
  • Katherine G. Quinn,
  • Staci A. Young,
  • Mallory O'Brien,
  • Terri A. deRoon-Cassini,
  • Julia Dickson-Gomez

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1
p. 100014

Abstract

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Women with opioid use disorders (WWOUD) experience disparities in access to substance use disorder (SUD) treatment, yet the reasons for these differences are unclear. Co-occurring social and structural factors may work synergistically to impede women's treatment-seeking efforts. The current study explored the socio-structural context of SUD treatment-seeking among WWOUD. We used in-depth, semi-structured interviews with 56 women who had misused any opioid in the past year to address the study's aims. Constructivist grounded theory principles were used to identify the socio-structural barriers to SUD treatment entry through the lens of syndemics and structural violence. Study results illustrate how WWOUD can encounter a host of mutually reinforcing negative conditions that are situated within the broader socio-structural context of social stigma, poverty, limited availability of SUD treatment options, and a punitive societal approach to drug use. Findings indicate a need to implement and expand structural interventions that address economic and housing insecurity and childcare needs. Strategies that move systems away from a punitive approach to drug use are also encouraged, in favor of supportive and cross-system collaborative approaches that can facilitate women's access to SUD treatment services.

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