期刊
SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE
卷 232, 期 -, 页码 324-331出版社
PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2019.05.027
关键词
United States; Stigma; Medical intervention; Medication-assisted treatment; Opioids; Addiction; Treatment; Behavioral health; Health professionals
资金
- University of Texas at San Antonio Vice President for Research office
Methadone and buprenorphine are drugs used to treat opioid use disorders, and are labeled the gold standard of treatment by the National Institutes of Health. Yet associating with these forms of medication-assisted treatment (MAT) subjects individuals to stigma from healthcare personnel both within and outside addiction treatment communities. This study uses the case of MAT to propose a new category of stigma: intervention stigma. Unlike condition stigmas that mark individuals due to diagnosis, intervention stigma marks patients and health professionals due to involvement with a medical treatment or other form of intervention. In-depth interviews with 47 addiction treatment professionals explore how individuals working in MAT experience discrimination and prejudice from other healthcare professionals, especially abstinent treatment professionals who disagree with the use of medications to treat opioid use disorders. This discrimination and prejudice stems at times from stigma toward addiction diagnoses, and at other times toward unique features of MAT itself. The experiences of addiction treatment professionals illustrate how medical interventions can mark patients and professionals in ways that affect patient care, and thus must be added to the scope of destigmatization efforts operating in the health sector.
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