4.2 Article

Prescribing Opioids as an Incentive to Retain Patients in Medical Care: A Qualitative Investigation into Clinician Awareness and Perceptions

Journal

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1016/j.jana.2018.05.010

Keywords

adherence; addiction; engagement; HIV; opioids; prescribing behavior; treatment retention

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Funding

  1. National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) [K23DA039037]
  2. NIDA [K01DA039311]
  3. [K24HD062645]

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HIV treatment retention remains a significant public health concern. Our qualitative analysis used emergent data from a larger HIV treatment study to explore clinician perspectives on prescribing opioids to incentivize retention in HIV care. Data from individual interviews with 29 HIV and substance use clinicians were analyzed using thematic analysis. Prescribing opioids as a retention strategy emerged as a theme. Nine of 11 HIV clinicians reported prior knowledge of this practice; only one of 12 substance use clinicians indicated prior knowledge. Positive perceptions included: harm reduction approach, increased appointment attendance, and sustained engagement in HIV care. Negative perceptions included: addiction potential, increased engagement not leading to better health outcomes, and prescriptions becoming the appointment focus. Some clinicians used prescriptions as a strategy to improve treatment retention, which may be particularly problematic in light of the current opioid epidemic. Understanding motives, outcomes, and clinical decision-making processes is needed. Copyright (C) 2018 Association of Nurses in AIDS Care

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