| Literature DB >> 32257732 |
Erin L Winstanley, Gina M Baugh, Mark Garofoli, Andrew J Muzyk.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The objectives of this study were to describe health professional students' experiences and opinions about patients with opioid-use disorder (OUD), to summarize evaluation results from an OUD educational event and to compare results by sex, discipline, and clinical experience.Entities:
Keywords: education; health professional students; interprofessional; opioids; substance use
Year: 2020 PMID: 32257732 PMCID: PMC7108802 DOI: 10.9740/mhc.2020.03.049
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ment Health Clin ISSN: 2168-9709
Students' experience and opinions about patients with opioid use disorders (OUD), preintervention (n = 138)
| Experience | |
| I have experience treating patients with OUD | 21.9 |
| I have a family member or friend who has/had an OUD | 39.9 |
| I have interacted with drug-seeking patients | 48.2 |
| Perceived community stigma | |
| Most people believe that individuals with an OUD cannot be trusted | 92.0 |
| Most people believe that individuals with an OUD are dangerous | 78.8 |
| Many people are afraid of individuals with an OUD | 78.1 |
| Most people look down on individuals with an OUD after they receive treatment | 70.6 |
| Most employers will not hire someone in recovery from an OUD | 67.2 |
| Most people would not date or marry someone in recovery from an OUD | 58.8 |
| Most people think that individuals with an OUD are just as intelligent as the average person | 15.4 |
| Opinions about OUD treatment | |
| OUD is a treatable illness | 94.1 |
| Patients with an OUD should only be treated by specialists | 51.1 |
| A drug history is unlikely to be useful as patients generally try to hide their drug use | 38.5 |
| I feel that methadone treatment is merely supplying a drug to drug addicts | 25.8 |
| When patients with an OUD relapse several times, they probably cannot be treated | 22.6 |
| Treatments for patients with OUD are rarely successful | 20.2 |
| Patients cannot recover from an OUD | 2.2 |
| Opinions about working with OUD patients | |
| In general, it would be rewarding to work with patients with OUD | 72.9 |
| Patients with OUD are unpleasant to work with | 35.1 |
| I prefer not to interact with OUD patients | 27.7 |
| I can't understand why patients with OUD keep using heroin and/or abusing prescription opioids | 22.8 |
| I believe I would often feel uncomfortable when working with patients with OUD | 29.1 |
| I couldn't imagine working with patients with OUD as a career | 23.5 |
| Role expectations/training | |
| I feel that I have the right to ask patients about their | 89.7 |
| I feel as a future/current health care provider, I will be able to appropriately advise my patients about | 88.2 |
| It is part of my job to | 88.0 |
| I feel as a future/current health care provider, I will be able to appropriately advise my patients about | 87.5 |
| It is part of my job to | 82.0 |
| I feel that I have the right to ask patients about their use of | 80.2 |
| It is part of my job to | 73.1 |
| My clinical training has prepared me to screen patients for nonmedical use of prescription opioids or heroin | 43.5 |
FIGUREPostintervention summary of open-ended responses (WV = West Virginia)