| Literature DB >> 31856845 |
Rogério Meireles Pinto1, Yun Chen2, Sunggeun Ethan Park2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Given the close connection between human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection and substance use disorder (SUD), access to integrated HIV and SUD services is critical for individuals experiencing both challenges and their biopsychosocial conditions.Entities:
Keywords: Barriers; Client-centered relational framework; HIV; Service integration; Substance use
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31856845 PMCID: PMC6923912 DOI: 10.1186/s12954-019-0347-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Harm Reduct J ISSN: 1477-7517
Fig. 1Barriers to service integration—a client-centered relational framework. Guided by a client-centered relational approach, this study directs focus to the relationships between clients and their providers, clients and service organizations, and clients and the socioeconomic structures under which they live. Barriers residing in these relationships affect the dynamic and ecological interactions when clients enter a service system
Fig. 2Summary of article selection and inclusion/exclusion criteria. Based on a comprehensive search and screening of literature in Web of Science, EBSCOhost, and PubMed, the study identified 23 articles that empirically examined the barriers to HIV and SUD service access from the perspectives of providers and clients in myriad service settings in the U.S.
Barriers to integrating HIV and SUD services for clients with multiple biopsychological and socioeconomic issues
| Articles | Sample | Client-provider domain | Client-organization domain | Client-system domain |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Turner et al. [ | Clients | ♦ Concerns about drug users’ lacking adherence to ART or HAART ♦ Biases toward former drug users | ||
| Lucas et al. [ | Clients | ♦ Inability to keep scheduled clients ♦ Emergency care services overload ♦ Distrust of medical establishment | ♦ Unstable life conditions ♦ Social isolation | |
| Loughlin et al. [ | Providers | ♦ Negative attitudes toward clients’ appointment truancy and HIV denial ♦ Concerns about HIV medication and drug use interactions | ♦ Homelessness ♦ Social isolation ♦ Unstable life conditions | |
| Ding et al. [ | Clients and providers | ♦ Lack experiences in treating IDUs ♦ Bias towards HIV-infected IDUs’ ♦ Ability to adhere to treatment ♦ Provider afflicted by depression and stress | ♦ High caseload | |
| Turner et al. [ | Providers | ♦ Lack of knowledge about the efficacy of methadone in HIV prevention | ♦ Lack of familiarity with clients who misuse narcotics due to low volume ♦ Lack of social workers, counselors, psychiatrists, and psychologists ♦ Burdensome paperwork ♦ Lack of HIV specialty services | ♦ Inadequate financial reimbursement |
| Ware et al. [ | Clients | ♦ Bias towards treatment adherence ♦ Lack of awareness of the stabilizing role of HAART medication | ♦ Stigma about HIV-positive drug users ♦ Unstable life conditions | |
| Vaughn [ | Provider | ♦ Bias toward clients: - Denial of medication effectiveness - Distrust of the medical establishment - Beliefs about HIV infection as a man-made form of genocide - Difficulties controlling substance use due to pain management - Mental health conditions | ♦ Long waitlist for substance use disorder treatment ♦ Lack of interprofessional collaboration ♦ Lack of pain management therapies ♦ Negative experiences with the medical establishment | ♦ Disenfranchisement ♦ Lack of insurance for substance use disorder treatments |
| Cunningham et al. [ | Providers | ♦ Lack of confidence/knowledge to address substance misuse, drug interaction, and substance misuse treatment approaches | ♦ Lack of collaboration across service providers in different health systems | ♦ Shortage of licensed buprenorphine prescribers |
| Macalino et al. [ | Providers | ♦ Lack of knowledge and negative attitudes toward syringe sharing, exchange programs, distribution practices, and syringe prescription as HIV prevention | ♦ Lack of familiarity with IDUs | ♦ Pharmacist stigma against IDUs ♦ Police stigma against IDUs |
| Westergaard et al. [ | Providers | ♦ Discomfort treating IDUs with HIV ♦ Bias toward IDUs’ inability to adhere to HAART | ♦ Lack of HIV or SUD services ♦ Lack of experts in HIV care ♦ High caseload ♦ Lack of familiarity with HIV clients | |
| Gwadz et al. [ | Clients | ♦ Poor provider-client communication ♦ Distrust between provider and client ♦ Stigmatization of and minimization of clients’ life experiences | ♦ Racism ♦ Poverty ♦ Lack of social support ♦ Housing instability ♦ Lack of public assistance | |
| Campbell et al. [ | Providers | ♦ Provider lacking flexibility and creativity in decision-making ♦ Poor provider-client communication ♦ Provider negative attitudes towards clients’ substance use | ♦ Bureaucratic barriers (e.g., paperwork) ♦ Lack of and poor quality of outreach services ♦ Lack of coordinating staff ♦ Lack of referral tracking and evaluation system | ♦ Housing instability ♦ Illicit drug use |
| Whetten et al. [ | Clients | ♦ Lack of transportation and inaccessible service resources | ||
| Spector et al. [ | Providers | ♦ Lack of knowledge and bias toward: - Clients’ ability to PrEP adherence - “Risk compensation” - PrEP side effects - PrEP reimbursement ♦ Lack of training in psycho-pharmacology | ♦ Lack of structure for referral making ♦ Lack of staff to prescribe PrEP and to monitor adherence | |
| Shrestha et al. [ | Clients | ♦ Irregular access to PrEP refills or follow-up visits | ♦ High PrEP medication cost ♦ Lack of insurance coverage ♦ Stigma and social discrimination | |
| Roth et al. [ | Clients | ♦ Lack of PrEP education access | ♦ Lack of access to primary care and thus HIV risk assessment exposure and PrEP education | |
| Downing et al. [ | Providers | ♦ Lack of flexible testing hours ♦ Distrust of organization’s treatment of confidential information ♦ Lack of training for providers ♦ Inadequate collaborations across agencies | ♦ Distrust of government’s treatment of confidential information | |
| Wyatt et al. [ | Clients | ♦ Poor provider-client relationship and distrust | ♦ Long wait lists and difficulty obtaining an appointment ♦ Distrust of organization’s treatment of confidential information | ♦ Financial problems |
| Knowlton et al. [ | Clients | ♦ Poor provider-client communication | ♦ Lack of outpatient services | ♦ Lack of social support ♦ Housing instability ♦ Racism |
| Wright et al. [ | Providers | ♦ Lack of capacity to provide HIV testing ♦ Additional administrative or clinical burdens coming with service integration ♦ Poor inter- and intra-agency communication | ♦ Lack of political support for HIV test (low awareness, funding, priority) ♦ Lack of regulations addressing service integration ♦ Lack of transportation ♦ Lacks state funding and infrastructure supporting service integration | |
| Biello et al. [ | Clients and providers | ♦ Poor provider-client relationship and distrust ♦ Low willingness to prescribe PrEP to drug users | ♦ Burdensome PrEP screening and retention protocols ♦ Lack of professional and interagency collaboration | ♦ HIV-related stigma ♦ Poor regional infrastructure and capacity for PrEP delivery ♦ Housing instability ♦ Poverty ♦ Disenfranchisement ♦ Transportation difficulties |
Schoeneberger et al. [ (NIDA Cooperative Agreement in Kentucky) | Clients | ♦ Long waitlist ♦ Some programs do not take women or women with children | ♦ Poverty ♦ Lack of regional substance use treatment resources ♦ Gender bias in treatment eligibility criteria | |
| Lutnick et al. [ | Clients | ♦ Stigmatization of clients’ behaviors | ♦ Lack of private space for clients to dispose of syringes and receive services ♦ Distrust of organization’s treatment of confidential information | |