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1.
BMC Health Serv Res ; 22(1): 1138, 2022 Sep 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36076267

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: People who use drugs and are structurally vulnerable (e.g., experiencing unstable and/or lack of housing) frequently access acute care. However, acute care systems and providers may not be able to effectively address social needs during hospitalization. Our objectives were to: 1) explore social service providers' perspectives on addressing social needs for this patient population; and 2) identify what possible strategies social service providers suggest for improving patient care. METHODS: We completed 18 semi-structured interviews with social service providers (e.g., social workers, transition coordinators, peer support workers) at a large, urban acute care hospital in Western Canada between August 8, 2018 and January 24, 2019. Interviews explored staff experiences providing social services to structurally vulnerable patients who use drugs, as well as continuity between hospital and community social services. We conducted latent content analysis and organized our findings in relation to the socioecological model. RESULTS: Tensions emerged on how participants viewed patient-level barriers to addressing social needs. Some providers blamed poor outcomes on perceived patient deficits, while others emphasized structural factors that impede patients' ability to secure social services. Within the hospital, some participants felt that acute care was not an appropriate location to address social needs, but most felt that hospitalization affords a unique opportunity to build relationships with structurally vulnerable patients. Participants described how a lack of housing and financial supports for people who use drugs in the community limited successful social service provision in acute care. They identified potential policy solutions, such as establishing housing supports that concurrently address medical, income, and substance use needs. CONCLUSIONS: Broad policy changes are required to improve care for structurally vulnerable patients who use drugs, including: 1) ending acute care's ambivalence towards social services; 2) addressing multi-level gaps in housing and financial support; 3) implementing hospital-based Housing First teams; and, 4) offering sub-acute care with integrated substance use management.


Assuntos
Serviço Social , Transtornos Relacionados ao Uso de Substâncias , Hospitalização , Hospitais , Humanos , Pesquisa Qualitativa , Transtornos Relacionados ao Uso de Substâncias/terapia
2.
Harm Reduct J ; 17(1): 72, 2020 10 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33028363

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Most of the existing research on supervised consumption services (SCS) is focused on injection drug use. Less is known about the applicability of SCS for people who consume drugs orally, intranasally, or through inhalation. This is problematic because people who use drugs through modes other than injection are also at risk of overdose death and other harm, and experience barriers accessing health and social services. We aimed to describe existing SCS models that accommodate these alternate routes of drug consumption, and synthesize available information on characteristics of program participants. METHODS: We conducted a systematic scoping review of 9 peer-reviewed and 13 grey literature databases on SCS that incorporate non-injection routes of consumption. We screened 22,882 titles, and excluded 22,843 (99.8%) articles. We ultimately included 39 (0.2%) full-text articles; 28 (72%) of these articles explicitly identified SCS that permit alternate routes of consumption and 21 (54%) discussed characteristics of participants who consume drugs through non-injection routes. Data on study characteristics, terms and definitions, and site and program participant characteristics were extracted and double-coded. Extracted data were analyzed using descriptive statistics and narrative synthesis. RESULTS: Included articles describe 48 SCS that permit non-injection routes of consumption, most of which were located in Germany. The majority of these SCS were legally sanctioned and had models of care that were largely comparable to supervised injection services. Notable differences included physical infrastructure such as ventilated rooms or outdoor areas to accommodate inhalation, and shorter time limits on non-injection drug consumption episodes. Program participants engaging in non-injection forms of consumption were typically men over the age of 30 and structurally vulnerable (e.g., experiencing homelessness or unstable housing). CONCLUSIONS: Extant academic and grey literature indicates that site characteristics and demographics of program participants of SCS that permit non-injection routes of consumption largely reflect those of supervised injection services. Further research on the range of existing SCS that incorporate non-injection routes of consumption is needed to ensure high quality service provision, and improved health outcomes for people who consume drugs via oral, intranasal, and inhalation routes.


Assuntos
Overdose de Drogas/prevenção & controle , Redução do Dano , Centros de Tratamento de Abuso de Substâncias/organização & administração , Transtornos Relacionados ao Uso de Substâncias/prevenção & controle , Administração por Inalação , Atenção à Saúde , Overdose de Drogas/diagnóstico , Overdose de Drogas/epidemiologia , Humanos , Abuso de Substâncias por Via Intravenosa
3.
PLoS One ; 19(2): e0297584, 2024.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38359010

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: People who inject drugs in North America often continue to inject while hospitalized, and are at increased risk of premature hospital discharge, unplanned readmission, and death. In-hospital access to sterile injection supplies may reduce some harms associated with ongoing injection drug use. However, access to needle and syringe programs in acute care settings is limited. We explored the implementation of a needle and syringe program integrated into a large urban tertiary hospital in Western Canada. The needle and syringe program was administered by an addiction medicine consult team that offers patients access to specialized clinical care and connection to community services. METHODS: We utilized a focused ethnographic design and semi-structured interviews to elicit experiences and potential improvements from 25 hospitalized people who inject drugs who were offered supplies from the needle and syringe program. RESULTS: Participants were motivated to accept supplies to prevent injection-related harms and access to supplies was facilitated by trust in consult team staff. However, fears of negative repercussions from non-consult team staff, including premature discharge or undesired changes to medication regimes, caused some participants to hesitate or refuse to accept supplies. Participants described modifications to hospital policies regarding inpatient drug use or access to an inpatient supervised consumption service as potential ways to mitigate patients' fears. CONCLUSIONS: Acute care needle and syringe programs may aid hospital providers in reducing harms and improving hospital outcomes for people who inject drugs. However, modifications to hospital policies and settings may be necessary.


Assuntos
Abuso de Substâncias por Via Intravenosa , Humanos , Abuso de Substâncias por Via Intravenosa/complicações , Programas de Troca de Agulhas , Agulhas , Pacientes Internados , Políticas
4.
Can J Public Health ; 114(5): 787-795, 2023 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37462841

RESUMO

SETTING: A temporary emergency shelter was established inside the Commonwealth Stadium in Edmonton, Alberta, to reduce COVID-19 transmission and mitigate health risks among people experiencing homelessness. INTERVENTION: A non-profit organization, Boyle Street Community Services, opened an overdose prevention site (OPS) between February and March 2022 inside the temporary emergency shelter. People accessed the shelter-based OPS to consume unregulated drugs (via injection, intranasally, or orally), receive medical aid, access sterile drug use equipment, and be connected to additional health and social supports, without leaving the shelter. We conducted short interviewer-administered surveys with OPS participants to examine participant views and identify suggested improvements. OUTCOMES: The shelter-based OPS was accessed a total of 1346 times by 174 unique people. Fentanyl was the most common self-reported drug consumed (59%) and most consumption (99% of episodes) was by injection. OPS staff responded to 66 overdoses and reported no deaths. Survey respondents reported that the shelter-based OPS was convenient, with no need to forfeit their shelter spot or find transportation to another OPS. Respondents indicated that the OPS felt safe and accessible and reported that it reduced drug use in other shelter areas. Participants identified the OPS' exclusion of inhalation as a limitation. IMPLICATIONS: People who use unregulated drugs and are experiencing homelessness are at a higher risk of negative health outcomes, which COVID-19 exacerbated. Integrating temporary shelter/housing and harm reduction services may be an innovative way to lower barriers, increase accessibility, and improve well-being for this structurally vulnerable population. Future operators should consider incorporating inhalation services to further reduce service gaps.


RéSUMé: LIEU: Un refuge d'urgence temporaire avait été établi dans le stade du Commonwealth à Edmonton (Alberta) pour réduire la transmission de la COVID-19 et atténuer les risques pour la santé chez les personnes en situation d'itinérance. INTERVENTION: Un organisme sans but lucratif, Boyle Street Community Services, a ouvert un centre de prévention des surdoses (CPS) entre février et mars 2022 à l'intérieur de ce refuge d'urgence temporaire. Les gens avaient accès au CPS du refuge pour consommer des médicaments non réglementés (par injection ou par voie intranasale ou buccale), recevoir de l'aide médicale, se procurer du matériel de consommation stérile et être mis en rapport avec d'autres intervenants et intervenantes de la santé et des services sociaux sans sortir du refuge. Nous avons mené de brefs sondages administrés par l'enquêteur ou l'enquêtrice auprès des participantes et des participants du CPS pour étudier leurs points de vue et formuler des suggestions d'améliorations. RéSULTATS: Le CPS du refuge a été utilisé 1 346 fois par 174 personnes. Le fentanyl a été le médicament le plus souvent consommé selon les utilisateurs et utilisatrices (59 %), et la plupart du temps (dans 99 % des cas), il était consommé par injection. Le personnel du CPS est intervenu lors de 66 surdoses et n'a rapporté aucun décès. Les répondantes et répondants aux sondages ont indiqué que le CPS du refuge était pratique, car il n'était pas nécessaire d'abandonner leur place dans le refuge, ni de trouver un moyen de se rendre dans un autre CPS. Ces personnes ont trouvé le CPS sûr et accessible et ont dit qu'il avait réduit la consommation de drogue dans d'autres zones de refuge. Les participantes et participants ont indiqué que l'exclusion de la consommation par inhalation dans le CPS était toutefois une contrainte. CONSéQUENCES: Les personnes en situation d'itinérance qui consomment des médicaments non réglementés courent un plus grand risque d'avoir des résultats cliniques négatifs, ce que la COVID-19 a exacerbé. L'intégration de refuges/logements temporaires et de services de réduction des méfaits peut être un moyen novateur de réduire les obstacles, d'accroître l'accessibilité et d'améliorer le bien-être de cette population structurellement vulnérable. Les futurs gestionnaires devraient songer à intégrer des services d'inhalation pour réduire encore davantage les lacunes dans les services.


Assuntos
COVID-19 , Overdose de Drogas , Humanos , Pandemias/prevenção & controle , COVID-19/epidemiologia , Abrigo de Emergência , Programas de Troca de Agulhas , Overdose de Drogas/prevenção & controle , Overdose de Drogas/epidemiologia , Redução do Dano
5.
Can J Public Health ; 114(6): 928-933, 2023 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37930628

RESUMO

Supervised consumption services have been scaled up within Canada and internationally as an ethical imperative in the context of a public health emergency. A large body of peer-reviewed evidence demonstrates that these services prevent poisoning deaths, reduce infectious disease transmission risk behaviour, and facilitate clients' connections to other health and social services. In 2019, the Alberta government commissioned a review of the socioeconomic impacts of seven supervised consumption services in the province. The report is formatted to appear as an objective, scientifically credible evaluation of these services; however, it is fundamentally methodologically flawed, with a high risk of biases that critically undermine its authors' assessment of the scientific evidence. The report's findings have been used to justify decisions that jeopardize the health and well-being of people who use drugs both in Canada and internationally. Governments must ensure that future assessments of supervised consumption services and other public health measures to address drug poisoning deaths are scientifically sound and methodologically rigorous. Health policy must be based on the best available evidence, protect the right of structurally vulnerable populations to access healthcare, and not be contingent on favourable public opinion or prevailing political ideology.


RéSUMé: Les services de consommation supervisée ont été établis au Canada et à l'étranger en tant qu'impératif éthique dans le contexte d'une urgence de santé publique. Un grand nombre d'études rigoureuses démontrent que ces services préviennent les décès par empoisonnement, réduisent les comportements à risque de transmission de maladies infectieuses, et facilitent les liens avec d'autres services sociaux et de santé. En 2019, le gouvernement de l'Alberta a commandé un examen des impacts socioéconomiques de sept services de consommation supervisée dans la province. La présentation du rapport donne l'impression que l'évaluation de ces services est objective et scientifiquement crédible; cependant, il présente des faiblesses importantes au plan méthodologique, notamment en raison de la présence de biais qui compromet l'évaluation des preuves scientifiques. Ses conclusions ont été utilisées pour justifier des décisions qui mettent en péril la santé et le bien-être des personnes qui consomment des drogues, tant au Canada qu'à l'étranger. Les gouvernements doivent s'assurer que les futures évaluations des services de consommation supervisée et d'autres mesures de santé publique pour lutter contre les décès par empoisonnement dû aux drogues sont scientifiquement fondées. Les politiques en matière de santé doivent être basées sur les meilleures données disponibles, protéger les droits des populations structurellement vulnérables à accéder aux soins de santé, et ne pas dépendre de l'opinion publique ou d'une idéologie politique dominante.


Assuntos
Redução do Dano , Serviço Social , Humanos , Alberta/epidemiologia
6.
Int J Drug Policy ; 102: 103589, 2022 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35101668

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Internationally, many supervised consumption services (SCS) include drug inhalation (smoking). However, most research is focused on SCS for people who inject drugs. We aimed to: (1) synthesize the literature on including inhalation or other forms of non-injection drug use (e.g., oral, intranasal) within SCS; (2) describe the state of the science on the feasibility of this practice and its outcomes; and (3) outline an agenda for future evaluation research in this area. METHODS: We searched 9 academic and 13 grey literature databases and ultimately included 40 studies. Thirty-two studies (80%) reported findings from feasibility or needs assessments. From these studies, we extracted information on willingness to use these services, perspectives of people who use drugs and other stakeholders, and recommendations for implementation. Eight studies (20%) evaluated including inhalation in SCS, from which we extracted data on associated outcomes. Data were analysed using narrative synthesis and descriptive statistics. RESULTS: We found high willingness to use SCS including inhalation among people who use drugs, especially those experiencing structural vulnerability. Research emphasized a need for implementation to account for the social nature of drug inhalation, and to limit potential occupational hazards associated with passive inhalation. Positive outcomes associated with inhalation within SCS included improved health and safety of people who use drugs and decreased public drug use. However, this evidence was based primarily on a limited number of studies with designs of mixed quality. CONCLUSION: Our review demonstrates feasibility of, and need for, implementing SCS including inhalation, and some potential positive outcomes associated with this practice. However, more comprehensive and systematic evaluations of including inhalation as well as other forms of non-injection drug use (e.g., oral, intranasal, rectal) within SCS should be conducted.


Assuntos
Literatura Cinzenta , Transtornos Relacionados ao Uso de Substâncias , Administração por Inalação , Humanos , Fumar
7.
Int J Drug Policy ; 108: 103805, 2022 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35907373

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Health risks associated with drug use are concentrated amongst structurally vulnerable people who use illegal drugs (PWUD). We described how Canadian policy actors view structural vulnerability in relation to harm reduction and policymaking for illegal drugs, and what solutions they suggest to reduce structural vulnerability for PWUD. METHODS: The Canadian Harm Reduction Policy Project is a mixed-method, multiple case study. The qualitative component included 73 semi-structured interviews conducted with harm reduction policy actors across Canada's 13 provinces and territories between November 2016 and December 2017. Interviews explored perspectives on harm reduction and illegal drug policies and the conditions that facilitate or constrain policy change. Our sub-analysis utilized a two-step inductive analytic process. First, we identified transcript segments that discussed structural vulnerability or analogous terms. Second, we conducted latent content analysis on the identified excerpts to generate main findings. RESULTS: The central role of structural vulnerability (including poverty, unstable/lack of housing, racialization) in driving harm for PWUD was acknowledged by participants in all provinces and territories. Criminalization, in particular, was seen as a major contributor to structural vulnerability by justifying formal and informal sanctions against drug use and, by extension, PWUD. Many participants expressed that their personal understanding of harm reduction included addressing the structural conditions facing PWUD, yet identified that formal government harm reduction policies focused solely on drug use rather than structural factors. Participants identified several potential policy solutions to intervene on structural vulnerability including decriminalization, safer supply, and enacting policies encompassing all health and social sectors. CONCLUSIONS: Structural vulnerability is salient within Canadian policy actors' discourses; however, formal government policies are seen as falling short of addressing the structural conditions of PWUD. Decriminalization and safer supply have the potential to mitigate immediate structural vulnerability of PWUD while policies evolve to advance social, economic, and cultural equity.


Assuntos
Drogas Ilícitas , Transtornos Relacionados ao Uso de Substâncias , Canadá , Redução do Dano , Humanos , Formulação de Políticas , Política Pública , Transtornos Relacionados ao Uso de Substâncias/prevenção & controle
8.
JBI Evid Synth ; 20(9): 2395-2407, 2022 09 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36081380

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: The aim of this scoping review is to describe how a public health approach to legal and illegal psychoactive substance use has been previously defined, and to identify its core values, concepts, activities, and goals. INTRODUCTION: Jurisdictions globally are increasingly endorsing a public health approach to addressing psychoactive substance use. However, there is currently no agreed definition of this approach, and this term has been applied inconsistently in the literature, policy, and practice. A critical first step toward advancing a public health approach to substance use is identifying and articulating its core components. INCLUSION CRITERIA: This review will consider all peer-reviewed and gray literature in English focused on conceptualizing, defining, or describing a public health approach to substance use. Our review does not place limitations on populations, psychoactive substance types, or other contextual factors. METHODS: We will search PROSPERO, MEDLINE, Embase, PsycINFO, Cochrane Library, CINAHL, and Scopus, as well as health and social science databases; websites of prominent nonprofit, civil society, and government agencies/organizations in public health and substance use fields; and reference lists of included articles. Two independent reviewers will screen titles/abstracts of peer-reviewed literature, and 1 reviewer will screen titles/abstracts of gray literature. Two independent reviewers will conduct the full-text screening. A data extraction sheet will be pilot tested through double extraction. Findings will be presented as a narrative summary supported by tables and diagrams and, if feasible, a conceptual framework for understanding and applying a public health approach to substance use. SCOPING REVIEW REGISTRATION NUMBER: Open Science Framework https://osf.io/sv25e.


Assuntos
Saúde Pública , Transtornos Relacionados ao Uso de Substâncias , Humanos , Revisão por Pares , Literatura de Revisão como Assunto , Transtornos Relacionados ao Uso de Substâncias/epidemiologia
9.
Health Promot Chronic Dis Prev Can ; 37(10): 323-332, 2017 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês, Francês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29043759

RESUMO

INTRODUCTION: Food insecurity and foodborne disease are important issues in Canada, and the public health actions taken to address them can be conceptualized as factors shaping the food environment. Given emerging evidence that these two areas may interrelate, the objective of this study was to explore ways in which community food security efforts and food safety practices (and the population health issues they aim to address) may intersect in British Columbia, Canada, and interpret what this might mean for conceptualizing and attaining healthier food environments. METHODS: We conducted 14 key informant interviews with practitioners working in community food security and food safety in British Columbia, and used qualitative descriptive analysis to identify examples of intersections between the sectors. RESULTS: Participants identified four key ways that the two sectors intersect. They identified (1) how their daily practices to promote safe or healthy food could be helped or hindered by the activities of the other sector; (2) that historically disjointed policies that do not consider multiple health outcomes related to food may complicate the interrelationship; (3) that the relationship of these sectors is also affected by the fact that specific types of food products, such as fresh produce, can be considered both risky and beneficial; and (4) that both sectors are working towards the same goal of improved population health, albeit viewing it through slightly different lenses. CONCLUSION: Food security and food safety connect in several ways, with implications for characterizing and improving Canadian food environments. Collaboration across separated public health areas related to food is needed when designing new programs or policies aimed at changing the way Canadians eat.


INTRODUCTION: L'insécurité alimentaire et les maladies d'origine alimentaire constituent des enjeux importants au Canada, et on peut considérer les mesures de santé publique prises pour les résoudre comme des facteurs qui façonnent l'environnement alimentaire. De nouvelles données probantes allant dans le sens d'une interrelation entre ces deux domaines, l'objectif de cette étude était d'explorer comment, en Colombie-Britannique (Canada), les efforts en matière de sécurité alimentaire des collectivités et les pratiques de salubrité des aliments (ainsi que les problèmes de santé de la population associés) peuvent se recouper, puis d'interpréter ces résultats pour concevoir et construire un environnement alimentaire plus sain. MÉTHODOLOGIE: Nous avons mené 14 entrevues auprès d'informateurs clés (praticiens des secteurs de la sécurité alimentaire des collectivités et de la salubrité des aliments en Colombie-Britannique) et procédé à une analyse descriptive qualitative pour trouver les points d'intersection entre ces deux secteurs. RÉSULTATS: Les participants ont fait état de quatre modalités de convergence entre les deux secteurs. Ils ont signalé comment les pratiques quotidiennes de leur secteur visant à promouvoir des aliments sûrs ou sains pouvaient être favorisées ou entravées par les activités de l'autre secteur, en partie car les politiques passées, disparates, ne tenaient pas compte des nombreux effets sur la santé en lien avec l'alimentation et car certains types de produits alimentaires, comme les fruits et légumes frais, peuvent être considérés à la fois comme risqués et bénéfiques. Enfin, ils ont souligné que les deux secteurs travaillent à l'atteinte d'un même but, soit celui d'améliorer la santé de la population, même si leur optique se révèle légèrement différente. CONCLUSION: La sécurité alimentaire et la salubrité des aliments sont connectées de plusieurs façons, ce qui a une incidence sur les spécificités de l'environnement alimentaire canadien et sur son amélioration. La collaboration entre les divers secteurs de la santé publique en lien avec l'alimentation est nécessaire pour concevoir de nouveaux programmes ou de nouvelles politiques visant à transformer les habitudes alimentaires des Canadiens.


Assuntos
Exposição Dietética , Inocuidade dos Alimentos/métodos , Abastecimento de Alimentos/métodos , Colúmbia Britânica , Exposição Dietética/análise , Exposição Dietética/estatística & dados numéricos , Política Ambiental , Humanos , Avaliação das Necessidades , Saúde da População , Saúde Pública/métodos , Pesquisa Qualitativa
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