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Opioids & SU

The Literature Collection contains over 11,000 references for published and grey literature on the integration of behavioral health and primary care. Learn More

Use the Search feature below to find references for your terms across the entire Literature Collection, or limit your searches by Authors, Keywords, or Titles and by Year, Type, or Topic. View your search results as displayed, or use the options to: Show more references per page; Sort references by Title or Date; and Refine your search criteria. Expand an individual reference to View Details. Full-text access to the literature may be available through a link to PubMed, a DOI, or a URL. References may also be exported for use in bibliographic software (e.g., EndNote, RefWorks, Zotero).

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11193 Results
7301
Perceived preparedness to provide preventive counseling: reports of graduating primary care residents at academic health centers
Type: Journal Article
Authors: E. R. Park, T. J. Wolfe, M. Gokhale, J. P. Winickoff, N. A. Rigotti
Year: 2005
Publication Place: United States
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To assess the perceived preparedness of residents in adult primary care specialties to counsel patients about preventive care and psychosocial issues. DESIGN: Cross-sectional national mail survey of residents (63% response rate). PARTICIPANTS: Nine hundred twenty-eight final-year primary care residents in Internal Medicine (IM), family practice (FP), and Obstetrics/Gynecology (OB/GYN) at 162 U.S. academic health centers. MEASUREMENTS: Residents self-rated preparedness to counsel patients about smoking, diet and exercise, substance abuse, domestic violence, and depression. RESULTS: Residents felt better prepared to counsel about smoking (62%) and diet and exercise (53%) than about depression (37%), substance abuse (36%), or domestic violence (21%). In most areas, females felt better prepared than males. Rates of counseling preparedness varied significantly by specialty after adjustment for gender, race, medical school location, and percent of training spent in ambulatory settings. FP residents felt better prepared than OB/GYN residents to counsel about smoking, diet and exercise, and depression, while OB/GYN residents felt better prepared to address domestic violence than IM or FP residents. IM residents' perceptions of preparedness were between the other 2 specialties. Proportion of training spent in ambulatory settings was not associated with residents' perceived preparedness. CONCLUSIONS: Physicians completing residencies in adult primary care did not feel very well prepared to counsel patients about preventive and psychosocial issues. Significant differences exist among specialties, even after adjusting for differences in time spent in ambulatory settings. Increasing residency time in ambulatory settings may not alone be sufficient to ensure that residents emerge with adequate counseling skills.
Topic(s):
Education & Workforce See topic collection
7303
Perceived Safety and Effectiveness of Cannabis and Other Types of Pain Treatments Among Adults with Chronic Noncancer Pain in U.S. States with Medical Cannabis Programs
Type: Journal Article
Authors: S. A. White, M. C. Bicket, E. E. McGinty
Year: 2023
Topic(s):
Opioids & Substance Use See topic collection
,
Healthcare Disparities See topic collection
7304
Perceived stigma reductions following participation in mental health services integrated within community-based HIV primary care
Type: Journal Article
Authors: E. W. Farber, A. A. Shahane, J. L. Brown, P. E. Campos
Year: 2014
Publication Place: England
Abstract: HIV stigma remains a significant challenge for individuals living with HIV disease that can adversely affect overall well-being and patterns of HIV health service engagement. Finding ways to effectively address stigma concerns is, therefore, an important consideration in the clinical management of HIV disease. This study examined changes in perceived stigma in a sample of 48 adults living with HIV disease as an outcome of their participation in a mental health services program integrated with community-based HIV primary care. Participants completed a self-report instrument that provided a multidimensional measure of perceived HIV stigma, including distancing, blaming, and discrimination dimensions. This scale was administered at the baseline mental health service visit and then re-administered at the three-month follow-up point. Study results showed reductions in self-reported perceived HIV stigma over time for the distancing (t = 4.01, p = 0.000, d = 0.43), blaming (t = 2.79, p = 0.008, d = 0.35), and discrimination (t = 2.90, p = 0.006, d = 0.42) dimensions of stigma. These findings suggest that participation in HIV mental health services may have a favorable impact on perceived HIV stigma. Implications of these findings are discussed, including possible mechanisms that might explain the observed results as well as suggested directions for future research in this area. Randomized controlled trials would represent an important next step to investigate the extent to which HIV mental health services can reduce levels of perceived HIV stigma.
Topic(s):
Healthcare Disparities See topic collection
7305
Perceived stigma, barriers, and facilitators experienced by members of the opioid use disorder community when seeking healthcare
Type: Journal Article
Authors: M. K. McCurry, S. Avery-Desmarais, M. Schuler, M. Tyo, J. Viveiros, B. Kauranen
Year: 2023
7306
Perception of Apps for Mental Health Assessment With Recommendations for Future Design: United Kingdom Semistructured Interview Study
Type: Journal Article
Authors: E. L. Funnell, B. Spadaro, N. A. Martin-Key, J. Benacek, S. Bahn
Year: 2024
Topic(s):
HIT & Telehealth See topic collection
7307
Perception of primary care pediatricians of effectiveness, acceptability, and availability of mental health services
Type: Journal Article
Authors: N. R. Dempster, B. G. Wildman, J. Duby
Year: 2013
Abstract: Approximately 20% of children in the United States meet the criteria for a psychosocial disorder; however, less than 25% of these children receive psychosocial services. A questionnaire assessed primary care pediatricians' (PCPs) perceptions of effectiveness, availability, and burden of treatment options for children's psychosocial difficulties and parents' acceptance and adherence with these treatments. Repeated measures analysis of variance found that PCPs are more likely to refer children with psychosocial problems to a mental health professional than to prescribe medication. PCPs prescribe medications more than counseling parents themselves or watchful waiting. PCPs reported children's behavior is more likely to improve with mental health services than with medication, though medication is the most available treatment. PCPs believe parent training programs are very effective for treating children's behavior problems, but believe parents are more accepting and compliant with other treatments. Findings indicate PCPs' perceptions of availability and acceptability of treatment options drive their treatment recommendations of psychosocial problems.
Topic(s):
Education & Workforce See topic collection
,
Healthcare Disparities See topic collection
7308
Perceptions and experiences toward extended-release buprenorphine among persons leaving jail with opioid use disorders before and during COVID-19: An in-depth qualitative study
Type: Journal Article
Authors: Anna Cheng, Ryan Badolato, Andrew Segoshi, Ryan McDonald, Mia Malone, Kumar Vasudevan, Beita Badiei, Allison Sugarman, Ross MacDonald, Jasdeep Mangat, Jonathan Giftos, Joshua D. Lee, Babak Tofighi
Year: 2022
Topic(s):
Healthcare Disparities See topic collection
,
Opioids & Substance Use See topic collection
7309
Perceptions and practices addressing diversion among US buprenorphine prescribers
Type: Journal Article
Authors: L. A. Lin, M. R. Lofwall, S. L. Walsh, A. J. Gordon, H. K. Knudsen
Year: 2018
Publication Place: Ireland
Topic(s):
Opioids & Substance Use See topic collection
,
Education & Workforce See topic collection
7311
Perceptions of Community Corrections and Treatment Experience: A Qualitative Study Among People With Incarceration Histories Receiving Outpatient Methadone Treatment
Type: Journal Article
Authors: Gaeta Gazzola, L. M. S. Oberleitner, K. Hoffman, A. Eller, L. M. Madden, R. Marcus, D. Oberleitner, M. Beitel, E. Thompson, X. Zheng, D. T. Barry
Year: 2024
Abstract:

BACKGROUND: Community correctional experiences among individuals receiving methadone treatment (MT) for opioid use disorder (OUD) are poorly understood. We qualitatively investigated perceptions of community corrections and treatment experiences among individuals with criminal-legal system experience currently receiving outpatient MT. METHODS: From January to December 2017, we recruited 42 individuals with history of criminal-legal system involvement enrolled in outpatient MT at a low-barrier nonprofit organization operating multiple clinics in Connecticut. An experienced qualitative research team conducted one-to-one, in-person, semistructured interviews about incarceration and treatment experiences with individuals receiving MT. Participants completed a demographics survey. The interviews were audiorecorded, transcribed, de-identified, and independently coded using NVivo. RESULTS: Participants described the community corrections system as restrictive and abstinence-focused. Most participants described positive perceptions of and experiences with community corrections officers (CCOs), yet described negative perceptions of and experiences with the community corrections system overall. Participants perceived CCOs to have limited knowledge of OUD and MT. Participants described a range of CCO judgment toward their OUD, with some appearing understanding and nonjudgmental while others were perceived to have stigma and prejudice. Few participants noted assistance from CCOs with seeking MT or community-based substance use disorder care. Some participants desired improved treatment facilitation, but viewed forced or coercive treatment negatively. CONCLUSION: To our knowledge, this is the first qualitative study to examine community corrections experience among people receiving outpatient medication for OUD. While individuals receiving MT have negative experiences with the community corrections system, they perceive individual CCOs positively. Interventions addressing gaps in CCOs knowledge of OUD and MT are needed to optimize support for individuals on probation or parole with OUD. Provision of OUD treatment facilitation appears desirable to some individuals in community supervision.

Topic(s):
Opioids & Substance Use See topic collection
,
Healthcare Disparities See topic collection
7312
Perceptions of extended-release naltrexone, methadone, and buprenorphine treatments following release from jail
Type: Journal Article
Authors: M. Velasquez, M. Flannery, R. Badolato, A. Vittitow, R. D. McDonald, B. Tofighi, A. R. Garment, J. Giftos, J. D. Lee
Year: 2019
Abstract:

BACKGROUND: Few studies have documented patient attitudes and experiences with extended-release naltrexone (XR-NTX) opioid relapse prevention in criminal justice settings. This study assessed barriers and facilitators of jail-to-community reentry among adults with opioid use disorder (OUD) treated with XR-NTX, buprenorphine, methadone, and no medications. METHODS: This qualitative study conducted individual interviews with a purposeful and convenience sample of adults with OUD who were recently released from NYC jails. XR-NTX, no medication, and methadone participants were concurrently enrolled in a large randomized controlled trial evaluating XR-NTX vs. a no medication Enhanced Treatment As Usual (ETAU) condition, or enrolled in a non-randomized quasi-experimental methadone maintenance cohort. Buprenorphine participants were referred from NYC jails to a public hospital office-based buprenorphine program and not enrolled in the parent trial. Interviews were audio recorded, transcribed, independently coded by two researchers, and analyzed per a grounded theory approach adapted to the Social Cognitive Theory framework. The research team reviewed transcripts and coding to reach consensus on emergent themes. RESULTS: N = 33 adults with OUD (28 male, 5 female) completed a single individual interview. Purposeful sampling recruited persons leaving jail on XR-NTX (n = 11), no active medication treatment (n = 9), methadone (n = 9), and buprenorphine (n = 4). Emergent themes were: (1) general satisfaction with XR-NTX's long-acting antagonist effects and control of cravings; (2) "testing" XR-NTX's blockade with heroin upon reentry was common; (3) early discontinuation of XR-NTX treatment was most common among persons with high self-efficacy and/or heavy exposure to drug use environments and peers; (4) similar satisfaction regarding effects of methadone and buprenorphine maintenance among retained-in-treatment individuals, alongside general dissatisfaction with daily observed dosing requirements and misinformation and stigmas regarding methadone adverse effects; (5) unstable housing, economic insecurity, and exposure to actively using peers were attributed to early termination of treatment and relapse; (6) individual motivation and willpower as central to long-term opioid abstinence and reentry success. CONCLUSIONS: In the context of more familiar agonist maintenance treatments, XR-NTX relapse prevention during jail-to-community reentry was viewed as a helpful and unique intervention though with important limitations. Commonly described barriers to treatment retention and heroin abstinence included homelessness, economic insecurity, and drug-using peers. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT01999946 (XOR), Registered 03 December 2013, https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT01999946 .

Topic(s):
Education & Workforce See topic collection
,
Healthcare Disparities See topic collection
,
Opioids & Substance Use See topic collection
7313
Perceptions of fentanyl among African Americans who misuse opioids: implications for risk reduction
Type: Journal Article
Authors: K. K. Rigg, E. S. Kusiak
Year: 2023
Topic(s):
Opioids & Substance Use See topic collection
,
Healthcare Disparities See topic collection
7314
Perceptions of health managers and professionals about mental health and primary care integration in Rio de Janeiro: a mixed methods study
Type: Journal Article
Authors: K. Athie, A. L. Menezes, A. M. da Silva, M. Campos, P. G. Delgado, S. Fortes, C. Dowrick
Year: 2016
Publication Place: England
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Community-based primary mental health care is recommended in low and middle-income countries. The Brazilian Health System has been restructuring primary care by expanding its Family Health Strategy. Due to mental health problems, psychosocial vulnerability and accessibility, Matrix Support teams are being set up to broaden the professional scope of primary care. This paper aims to analyse the perceptions of health professionals and managers about the integration of primary care and mental health. METHOD: In this mixed-method study 18 health managers and 24 professionals were interviewed from different primary and mental health care services in Rio de Janeiro. A semi-structured survey was conducted with 185 closed questions ranging from 1 to 5 and one open-ended question, to evaluate: access, gateway, trust, family focus, primary mental health interventions, mental health records, mental health problems, team collaboration, integration with community resources and primary mental health education. Two comparisons were made: health managers and professionals' (Mann-Whitney non-parametric test) and health managers' perceptions (Kruskall-Wallis non parametric-test) in 4 service designs (General Traditional Outpatients, Mental Health Specialised Outpatients, Psychosocial Community Centre and Family Health Strategy)(SPSS version 17.0). Qualitative data were subjected to Framework Analysis. RESULTS: Firstly, health managers and professionals' perceptions converged in all components, except the health record system. Secondly, managers' perceptions in traditional services contrasted with managers' perceptions in community-based services in components such as mental health interventions and team collaboration, and converged in gateway, trust, record system and primary mental health education. Qualitative data revealed an acceptance of mental health and primary care integration, but a lack of communication between institutions. The Mixed Method demonstrated that interviewees consider mental health and primary care integration as a requirement of the system, while their perceptions and the model of work produced by the institutional culture are inextricably linked. CONCLUSION: There is a gap between health managers' and professionals' understanding of community-based primary mental health care. The integration of different processes of work entails both rethinking workforce actions and institutional support to help make changes.
Topic(s):
Education & Workforce See topic collection
7315
Perceptions of individuals in treatment for substance use disorder during COVID-19: insight on mental health, sobriety, access to treatment, and telehealth
Type: Journal Article
Authors: T. Bayers, T. Strohmaier, J. Shreffler, M. Huecker
Year: 2021
Publication Place: England
Abstract:

During the pandemic, the US has seen increases in substance use and the number of deaths by overdose. This study aimed to identify specific impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on those with SUD. Specifically, we catalogued the perceptions and impact of the pandemic on mental health, sobriety, access to medication for opioid use disorder (MOUD), and utility of telehealth in the treatment of SUD. Findings showed important perceptions patients had lower agreement on the difficulty of staying sober compared to COVID-19's effects on mental health and high agreement on openness to telehealth as treatment. Researchers and clinicians must continue efforts to understand and ameliorate the disproportionate burden in morbidity and mortality in individuals with SUD.

Topic(s):
Healthcare Disparities See topic collection
,
HIT & Telehealth See topic collection
,
Opioids & Substance Use See topic collection
7316
Perceptions of individuals in treatment for substance use disorder during COVID-19: insight on mental health, sobriety, access to treatment, and telehealth
Type: Journal Article
Authors: T. Bayers, T. Strohmaier, J. Shreffler, M. Huecker
Year: 2022
Publication Place: England
Abstract:

During the pandemic, the US has seen increases in substance use and the number of deaths by overdose. This study aimed to identify specific impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on those with SUD. Specifically, we catalogued the perceptions and impact of the pandemic on mental health, sobriety, access to medication for opioid use disorder (MOUD), and utility of telehealth in the treatment of SUD. Findings showed important perceptions patients had lower agreement on the difficulty of staying sober compared to COVID-19's effects on mental health and high agreement on openness to telehealth as treatment. Researchers and clinicians must continue efforts to understand and ameliorate the disproportionate burden in morbidity and mortality in individuals with SUD.

Topic(s):
Education & Workforce See topic collection
,
Healthcare Disparities See topic collection
,
HIT & Telehealth See topic collection
,
Opioids & Substance Use See topic collection
7317
Perceptions of medications, program settings, and drug use histories among individuals engaged in treatment for opioid use disorder
Type: Journal Article
Authors: Caroline Scherzer, Paola Jiménez Muñoz, Susan Ramsey, Kate B. Carey, Megan L. Ranney, Seth Clark, Josiah Rich, Kirsten J. Langdon
Year: 2024
Topic(s):
Opioids & Substance Use See topic collection
7318
Perceptions of mental health and substance use disorder services integration among the workforce in primary care settings
Type: Journal Article
Authors: D. Urada, E. Schaper, L. Alvarez, C. Reilly, M. Dawar, R. Field, V. Antonini, B. Oeser, D. Crevecoeur-MacPhail, R. A. Rawson
Year: 2012
Publication Place: United States
Abstract: It is important to understand the perceptions of staff members who will be implementing the expected integration of mental health and substance use services into primary care. Surveys were administered to mental health/substance use disorder (MH/SUD) staff, support staff (SS), and primary care providers (PCPs) from three organizations (seven sites) that were participating in an initiative to promote the integration of MH/SUD services into primary care in Kern County, California. Results suggest that integration and MH/SUD services are highly valued among all staff types, and that staff are uniformly interested in further MH/SUD training. However, there were significant differences in staff perceptions. MH/SUD staff and services were valued by PCPs more than MH/SUD staff perceived being valued by PCPs, and MH/SUD staff were less likely to agree that communication with PCPs was good. Information seemed to flow better from MH/SUD staff to PCPs than in the other direction.
Topic(s):
Education & Workforce See topic collection
7319
Perceptions of patients’ alcohol use and related problems among primary care professionals in Rio De Janeiro
Type: Journal Article
Authors: Sean J. Haley, Renata Vargens, Ana Alice da Silva Sudré, Flavia Ferreira, Kali Alves, Vitor Aguiar Lobato de Carvalho, Daniel Storti Netto Puig, Karen Athié, Sandra Fortes
Year: 2021
Topic(s):
Education & Workforce See topic collection
,
Opioids & Substance Use See topic collection
7320
Perceptions of provider awareness of traditional and cultural treatments among Indigenous people who use unregulated drugs in Vancouver, Canada
Type: Journal Article
Authors: A. Norton, F. Homayra, C. Defriend, B. Barker, L. Meilleur, K. Hayashi, B. Nosyk
Year: 2024
Topic(s):
Opioids & Substance Use See topic collection
,
Healthcare Disparities See topic collection