| Literature DB >> 33469774 |
Shashi N Kapadia1,2, Judith L Griffin3,4, Justine Waldman4, Nicolas R Ziebarth5, Bruce R Schackman6, Czarina N Behrends6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Stigma is a barrier to the uptake of buprenorphine to treat opioid use disorder. Harm reduction treatment models intend to minimize this stigma by organizing care around non-judgmental interactions with people who use drugs. There are few examples of implementing buprenorphine treatment using a harm reduction approach in a primary care setting in the USA.Entities:
Keywords: buprenorphine; harm reduction; opioid use disorder; primary care; qualitative
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33469774 PMCID: PMC7815286 DOI: 10.1007/s11606-020-06409-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Gen Intern Med ISSN: 0884-8734 Impact factor: 5.128
Participant Information
| Organization | Category* | Participant numbers |
|---|---|---|
| REACH medical practice | Leadership—non-clinical | L1, L2 |
| REACH medical practice | Leadership—clinical | L3, L4 |
| REACH medical practice | Staff—non-clinical | S1 |
| REACH medical practice | Staff—clinical | S2, S3, S4, S5, S6 |
| Syringe services program | External stakeholder | E2, E3, E6, E7 |
| County health department | External stakeholder | E1, E4 |
| County justice system | External stakeholder | E5 |
*Clinical staff included physicians, nurse practitioners, and registered nurses. All clinical staff were involved in buprenorphine treatment, and all prescribing clinicians are waivered providers
Summary of Themes
| Theme | Sub-themes | Representative quote |
|---|---|---|
| Organizational mission to provide equitable and low-stigma healthcare | • Mission of reducing stigma as the key to organizational identity • Contrast between REACH and other healthcare providers | “There’s a pragmatic service component to these things but there’s also a very important philosophical underpinning to the whole thing, and that philosophical underpinning is the basic belief that these are human beings, and we need to expect the best that they can do, and whatever that is, we need to acknowledge that and recognize that as their best.” (E2) |
| Low-threshold buprenorphine treatment and other clinical and social services | • Differences with community buprenorphine dosing and treatment norms • Logistical challenges in providing low-threshold buprenorphine • Integration of primary care with buprenorphine treatment | “We always knew we were going to start out by serving individuals with opiate use disorder as a primary target population…it’s evolved because now, we’re taking it a step further saying we want to treat the whole person to the extent that we can. Not just the opiate use disorder, but any other primary care needs, behavioral health needs (L2).” |
| Creation and retention of a harm reduction workforce | • Providers’ previous experiences in the healthcare system • “Harm-reductionizing” new providers • Maintaining a harm reduction culture | “The most important components of making this model work is having the entire staff be on board and supportive of the philosophy of care and that stigma free harm reduction model, because it doesn’t work any other way. You can’t have one bad apple, if what you’re trying to do is cultivate this different healthcare environment that people feel safe in (L2).” |
Figure 1Clinical and social services delivered at REACH.