3.8 Article

Opioid Use Disorder Terminologies and the Role of Public Health in Addressing Stigma

Journal

ALCOHOLISM TREATMENT QUARTERLY
Volume 39, Issue 1, Pages 110-118

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/07347324.2020.1787118

Keywords

Opioid use disorder; stigma; social class; public health

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Despite a movement toward people-first language in the mental health field, stigma surrounding Substance Use Disorder (SUD) persists and creates barriers to treatment. Opioid Use Disorder (OUD), with its iatrogenic origins and power differentials, complicates stigma and barriers to treatment, emerging as a major theme in public health discourse.
Substance use disorder (SUD) stigma persists in society despite a movement toward people-first language in the mental health field. Stigma creates barriers to treatment and marginalizes already at-risk populations. Opioid use disorder (OUD) is of particular relevance to this discussion because recent increases in OUD can be traced to iatrogenic origins, and as such, power differentials between prescriber and patient may complicate stigma and/or create additional barriers for those who develop opioid dependence. We examine the shift to use destigmatizing language surrounding OUD, explores the unique power dynamics associated with the rise of OUD prevalence, and presents a manifest content analysis of phrases related to OUD to observe the emergence of opioid use as a public health issue. Whereas SUD has long had visibility in public health discourse, OUD has emerged as a major theme in this discourse as its prevalence and mortality rate reached epidemic levels. We advocate for public health practice and research discourse to more uniformly adopt destigmatizing language alongside clinical SUD practitioners toward the goal of reducing stigma and barriers to treatment seeking for OUD.

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