| Literature DB >> 30445958 |
Lily Rowan Mahon1, Amanda N Hawthorne1, Julie Lee1, Heather Blue1, Laura Palombi2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: As the burden from the opioid epidemic continues to increase in the state of Minnesota and across the nation, the University of Minnesota College of Pharmacy seeks to design an innovative, comprehensive harm reduction curriculum in order to better train student pharmacists to serve the varied needs of the greater community. This study examines incoming individuals' baseline knowledge of and attitudes toward harm reduction in order to better inform curriculum planning and to ultimately produce pharmacists capable of impacting the devastating effects of the opioid crisis.Entities:
Keywords: Education; Harm reduction; Naloxone; Pharmacy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30445958 PMCID: PMC6240215 DOI: 10.1186/s12954-018-0262-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Harm Reduct J ISSN: 1477-7517
The consensual qualitative research process
| Coding cycle | Coding step | Description of coding step |
|---|---|---|
| First cycle | CQR: Independent holistic coding | • Transcripts were de-identified, including students name and campus. |
| CQR: Meeting #1 | • Discuss how each team member reached domain names by discussing raw data | |
| Code mapping (first iteration) | • Compile all domains with the corresponding blocks of data | |
| Second cycle | CQR: Independent descriptive | • Read transcripts for a second time |
| Model generation | • Organize domains and categories using a Model of Critical Pedagogy to create a visualization of important themes and information |
Domain themes, descriptions, and coding subdivisions after second cycle coding
| Domain | Domain themes and description | Coding subdivisions |
|---|---|---|
| Domain I | Education: Student describes importance of education in harm reduction for student, patients/community, and pharmacist. | • Curriculum/Student view |
| Domain II | Dispensing Needles: Student describes their opinions on dispensing needles without prescription | • Personally opposed but professionally for |
| Domain III | Dispensing naloxone: Students describe their opinions on dispensing naloxone | • Personally opposed but professionally for |
| Domain IV | Past working experience in the pharmacy: Students describe their past working experiences in the pharmacy that relate to needle dispensing, naloxone dispensing, or Prescription Monitoring Program (PMP) | • No subdivisions in this domain |
| Domain V | The role of the pharmacist: Student describes pharmacists’ role in harm reduction approaches to substance use | • Open minded |
| Domain VI | Barriers within students: Student describes the information related to dispensing naloxone in an incorrect manner and/or misunderstands the questions | • Would be okay with giving out for prescription but not for illicit drugs |
| Domain VII | Past experiences and exposures: Student describes their past experiences that relate to addiction and people who have/are addicted | • No subdivision in this domain |
| Domain VIII | Leading cause of opioid epidemic: Student describes their beliefs on major leading cause of opioid epidemic in the USA | • Overprescribing |
| Domain IX | Solutions: Student describes the possible solution to the opioid epidemic | • No subdivision in this domain |
Student reported brief opioid overdose risk knowledge
| Correct (%) | Incorrect (%) | I do not know (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Factor 1: General opioid knowledge | |||
| Long-acting opioids are used to treat chronic “round the clock” pain. [Statement is true] | 124 (74.25) | 13 (7.78) | 30 (17.96) |
| Methadone is a long acting opioid. [Statement is true] | 48 (28.74) | 32 (19.16) | 87 (52.10) |
| Restlessness, muscle and bone pain, and insomnia are symptoms of opioid withdrawal. [Statement is true] | 129 (77.25) | 5 (2.99) | 33 (19.76) |
| Heroin, OxyContin(R), and fentanyl are all examples of opioids. [Statement is true] | 141 (84.43) | 4 (2.40) | 22 (13.17) |
| Factor 2: Opioid overdose risk knowledge | |||
| Trouble breathing is NOT related to opioid overdose. [Statement is false] | 137 (82.04) | 2 (1.20) | 28 (16.77) |
| Clammy and cool skin is NOT a sign of an opioid overdose. [Statement is false] | 107 (64.07) | 5 (2.99) | 55 (32.93) |
| All overdoses are fatal (deadly). [Statement is false] | 133 (79.64) | 28 (16.77) | 6 (3.59) |
| Using a short-acting opioid and a long-acting opioid at the same time does NOT increase your risk of an opioid overdose. [Statement is false] | 127 (76.04) | 5 (2.99) | 35 (20.96) |
| Factor 3: Opioid overdose response knowledge | |||
| If you see a person overdosing on opioids, you can begin rescue breathing until a health worker arrives. [Statement is true] | 74 (44.31) | 14 (8.38) | 79 (47.31) |
| A sternal rub helps you evaluate whether someone is unconscious. [Statement is true] | 52 (31.14) | 10 (5.99) | 105 (62.87) |
| Once you confirm an individual is breathing, you can place him/her in the recovery position. [Statement is true] | 100 (59.88) | 12 (7.19) | 55 (32.93) |
| Narcan (naloxone) will reverse the effect of an opioid overdose. [Statement is true] | 131 (78.44) | 5 (2.99) | 31 (18.56) |
Student reported opioid overdose attitudes scales responses—abbreviated
| Agree (%) | Disagree (%) | Unsure (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| I am already able to inject naloxone into someone who has overdosed. | 6 (3.59) | 154 (92.22) | 7 (4.19) |
| I am going to need more training before I would feel confident to help someone who has overdosed. | 154 (92.22) | 6 (3.59) | 7 (4.19) |
| If someone overdoses, I would know what to do to help them. | 21 (12.58) | 90 (52.89) | 56 (33.53) |
| I know very little about how to help someone who has overdosed. | 111 (66.47) | 30 (17.96) | 26 (15.57) |
| I would be afraid of giving naloxone in case the person becomes aggressive afterword. | 42 (25.15) | 68 (40.72) | 57 (34.13) |
| I would be afraid of doing something wrong in an overdoses situation. | 130 (77.84) | 18 (10.78) | 19 (11.38) |
| I would be reluctant to use naloxone for fear of precipitating withdrawal symptoms. | 29 (17.37) | 95 (56.89) | 43 (25.75) |
| I would feel safer if I knew that naloxone was around. | 107 (64.07) | 18 (10.78) | 42 (24.15) |
| I would be afraid of suffering a needle stick injury if I had to give someone a naloxone injection. | 42 (25.15) | 93 (55.69) | 32 (19.16) |
| Needles frighten me and I wouldn’t be able to give someone an injection of naloxone. | 14 (8.38) | 141 (84.43) | 12 (7.19) |
| Everyone at risk of witnessing an overdose should be given a naloxone supply. | 61 (36.53) | 46 (27.55) | 60 (35.93) |
| I couldn’t just watch someone overdose, I would have to do something to help. | 147 (89.02) | 4 (2.40) | 16 (9.58) |
| If someone overdoses, I would call an ambulance but I wouldn’t be willing to do anything else. | 16 (9.58) | 118 (70.66) | 33 (19.76) |
| Family and friends of drug users should be prepared to deal with an overdose. | 149 (89.02) | 8 (4.79) | 10 (5.99) |
| If I saw an overdose, I would panic and not be able to help. | 11 (6.59) | 122 (73.05) | 34 (20.36) |
| If I saw an overdose, I would feel nervous, but I would still take the necessary actions. | 145 (86.83) | 7 (4.19) | 15 (8.98) |
| I will do whatever is necessary to save someone’s life in an overdose situation. | 148 (88.62) | 4 (2.40) | 15 (8.98) |
| If someone overdoses, I want to be able to help them. | 158 (94.61) | 2 (1.20) | 7 (4.19) |
| I would be concerned about calling emergency services in case the police come around. | 5 (2.99) | 155 (92.81) | 7 (4.19) |
| I would be able to perform chest compressions to someone who has overdosed. | 141 (84.43) | 10 (5.99) | 16 (9.58) |
Final coding results by domain/subdomain, mention, and frequency
| Domain | Sub domain | Number of times mentioned | Subdomain Percentage of total mentions | Domain Percentage of total mentions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Domain I | Curriculum/student view | 61 | 7.4% | 20.0% |
| Patients/community | 88 | 10.6% | ||
| Pharmacist | 17 | 2.1% | ||
| Domain II | Personally opposed but professionally support | 29 | 3.5% | 19.5% |
| Professionally opposed but personally support | 6 | 0.7% | ||
| Personally and professionally for support | 121 | 14.6% | ||
| Personally and professionally opposed | 6 | 0.7% | ||
| Domain III | Personally opposed but professionally support | 8 | 1.0% | 19.6% |
| Professionally opposed but personally support | 2 | 0.2% | ||
| Personally and professionally support | 151 | 18.2% | ||
| Personally and professionally opposed | 2 | 0.2% | ||
| Domain IV | No subdomains | 34 | 4.1% | 4.1% |
| Domain V | Open minded | 6 | 0.7% | 25.9% |
| Non-judgmental | 46 | 5.5% | ||
| Recognizing stigma addiction/mental health | 65 | 7.8% | ||
| Communication/interprofessional | 19 | 2.3% | ||
| Public health role | 79 | 9.5% | ||
| Domain VI | Would be okay with giving out for prescription but not for illicit drugs | 3 | 0.4% | 2.4% |
| Incorrect knowledge | 8 | 1.0% | ||
| Misunderstand the questions | 1 | 0.1% | ||
| Miscellaneous views | 8 | 1.0% | ||
| Domain VII | No subdomains | 22 | 2.6% | 2.6% |
| Domain VIII | Overprescribing | 11 | 1.3% | 3.9% |
| Manufacturing the opioid | 4 | 0.5% | ||
| Lack of education toward opioids | 5 | 0.6% | ||
| Prescription drugs → increased use of illegal street drugs | 13 | 1.6% | ||
| Domain IX | No subdomains | 14 | 1.7% | 1.6% |
Example of reflection discussions by domain
| Domain | Sub domain | Quotes (SN = student number) |
| Domain I | Curriculum/student view | “I am a perfect example of how education can help because I had the preconceived notions mentioned above on how these programs can be harmful before I heard the presentation in class and before I read the articles on them.” SN 156 |
| Patients/community | “I think education is crucial if we want to reduce substance abuse.” SN 113 | |
| Pharmacist | “If I had more training on how to help someone in an overdose situation besides calling 911 and knowing that I should [use] naloxone, I would feel more comfortable dispensing naloxone to my patients because then I could counsel them on how to use it as well.” SN 24 | |
| Domain II | Personally opposed but professionally support | “I believe that syringes should be used for medical purposes only and that they should be reserved for those who need to use them in the treatment of a medical condition. My younger brother is a Type 1 diabetic and has a need to use syringes for the maintenance of his diabetes. So, if a pharmacy dispenses needles to people without prescriptions that would mean less inventory for those who need needles to treat an actual medical condition such as insulin dependent diabetes, like my younger brother.” SN 53 |
| Professionally opposed but personally support | “I have to follow the rules as well as the practice that I have learned. Freely dispensing needles can cause problems for the society since we cannot control how many needles and syringes are in used.” SN 161 | |
| Personally and professionally for support | “By default, I think that pharmacies should dispense needles and that they should do so until it becomes a public health concern for the overall population. In this case, I think that my personal and professional stance are very similar. I personally am a little conflicted in saying that all pharmacies should dispense needles to anyone that asks for them, because there are potentially harmful consequences of that stance. While at the same time with the right programs put into place, sharps containers being available in public places and promoting treatment, the outcome of a reduction in infectious diseases would be a benefit to overall public health.” SN 134 | |
| Personally and professionally opposed | “Although, there has been studies shown that access to needle reduces transmission of infections I think otherwise.” SN 136 | |
| Domain III | Personally opposed but professionally support | “When you have a close friend who passed away from having an adverse reaction from being served a meal he was allergic to and did not have the chance to use an epinephrine pen to save his life, you begin to wonder why should someone abusing drugs be given a ‘just-in-case’ card to save their life.” SN 51 |
| Professionally opposed but personally support | “I feel the cost of treating and preventing an overdose should fall on the patient because they made a life choice to take a drug inappropriately and against doctors’ orders. I do not feel like naloxone should not be accessible though.” SN 21 | |
| Personally and professionally support | “My personal opinion is that naloxone should be dispensed freely through pharmacies, because in order to treat drug-reliant individuals, we first need to keep them alive.” SN 31 | |
| Personally and professionally opposed | “I believe we cannot be making excuses to a drug problem by counteracting it with another drug that might in the end promote the abuse more. Naloxone will only promote overall opioid substance use.” SN 136 | |
| Domain IV | No subdomains | “I have started to implement this already at my current pharmacy intern position by creating syringe kits to sell to patients that request them. In these kits, patients get 10 syringes, a sheet on safe needle disposal, information on how to acquire and administer naloxone, a list of phone numbers for treatment centers, and the national suicide hotline. Having this information in the kits is a discrete, non-judgmental, and pressure free way to get patients the information that could help them on the road to recovery.” SN 149 |
| Domain V | Open minded | “I will have an open mind as to why people need clean needles and to take the time to talk to them without judgment so they feel that they can trust me enough to come for help when needed.” SN 84 |
| Non-judgmental | “They are still people, their addiction does not define them or who they are as person. It would be unethical and cruel to ignore the medical risks my patients who struggle with addiction face because it would mean giving them a lesser quality of care simply because of their addiction status” SN 149 | |
| Recognizing stigma addiction/mental health | “People are all people, whether they have an addiction or not. We all crave compassion and for someone to listen.” SN 19 | |
| Communication/interprofessional | “Healthcare professionals and government officials need to learn how to communicate with one another because both sides depends on the other when it comes to keeping our communities healthy” SN 19 | |
| Public health role | “I believe that all pharmacists should have the public health mindset that overall population livelihood comes before personal beliefs. Naloxone can prevent death, and I do not believe one gets to ‘play God’ by deciding someone who uses (or anyone for that matter) does not deserve to be saved.” SN 33 | |
| Domain VI | Would be okay with giving out for prescription but not for illicit drugs | “I believe if a patient needs needles they should have to show evidence of either a past prescription that indicates they are still using the needles or some documentation that provides that the patient requires the needles for a medical reason. If a patient cannot show documentation of why they need the needles then they most likely do not need the needles and will be using them to shoot heroin.” SN 30 |
| Incorrect knowledge | “As for the naloxone dispensing, I do not support the idea that it should be wildly available to citizens. Naloxone is an opiate antagonist which is used intravenously in emergency situations to reverse the respiratory depression caused by overdoses of heroin, morphine or other opioids.” SN 165 | |
| Misunderstand the questions | I am only half agree with the statement of the former FDA head that “Opioid epidemic is one of ‘the great mistakes of modern medicine.’ The reason for my half agreement is that at the time opioid was invented, none would think that humans would addict to it. The medication was purely intended for relieving pain, but humans figured another way to abuse the substance and eventually die from overdose.” SN 67 | |
| Miscellaneous views | “Ultimately I believe that opioid and other narcotic abusers can get well, but they need to have a strong enough desire to quit, and unfortunately that generally does not happen until the impact of their drug abuse has caused massive consequences that force them to examine their choices. As a result, on a personal level, I feel that harm reduction approaches to addiction, like needle exchange, can actually do more harm than good.” AN 103 | |
| Domain VII | No subdomains | “I recently lost a family member to a prescription drug overdose, but there was no antidote for that drug. My family was still devastated by our loss even though we knew the doctors/pharmacists did everything they could to save this family member. I cannot even imagine how devastating it would be for someone else to lose a family member to an opioid, knowing that an antidote does exist yet they did not have it accessible at the right time.” SN 18 |
| Domain VIII | Overprescribing | “Overprescribing of opioids is what sets the path for addiction in many patients.” SN 1 |
| Manufacturing the opioid | “What we are hoping to see is the actions taken in reducing the manufacturing the opioids because those companies are facing decreases in profit if the consumption of opioids goes down.” SN 11 | |
| Lack of education towards opioids | “My doctors did not even ask me about the pain, that they did not try to stop me from taking those powerful drugs, and I did not realize that I was getting addicted until three weeks later.” SN 82 | |
| Prescription drugs → increased use of illegal street drugs | “As it becomes harder to obtain prescription opioid both legally and illegally, more individuals are moving to heroin which is cheaper and more addictive.” SN 49 | |
| Domain IX | No subdomains | “I feel that when a patient is found abusing substances and instead of taking that person to jail, they should be taken to a rehab facility instead” SN25 |